Is early tuberculosis death associated with increased tuberculosis transmission?

Tuberculosis (TB) is now a relatively uncommon disease in high income countries. As such, its diagnosis may be missed or delayed resulting in death before or shortly after the introduction of treatment. Whether early TB death is associated with increased TB transmission is unknown. To determine the...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-01, Vol.10 (1), p.e0117036-e0117036
Hauptverfasser: Parhar, Anu, Gao, Zhiwei, Heffernan, Courtney, Ahmed, Rabia, Egedahl, Mary Lou, Long, Richard
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Gao, Zhiwei
Heffernan, Courtney
Ahmed, Rabia
Egedahl, Mary Lou
Long, Richard
description Tuberculosis (TB) is now a relatively uncommon disease in high income countries. As such, its diagnosis may be missed or delayed resulting in death before or shortly after the introduction of treatment. Whether early TB death is associated with increased TB transmission is unknown. To determine the transmission risk attributable to early TB death we undertook a case-control study. All adults who were: (1) diagnosed with culture-positive pulmonary TB in the Province of Alberta, Canada between 1996 and 2012, and (2) died a TB-related death before or within the first 60 days of treatment, were identified. For each of these "cases" two sets of "controls" were randomly selected from among culture-positive pulmonary TB cases that survived beyond 60 days of treatment. "Controls" were matched by age, sex, population group, +/- smear status. Secondary cases of "cases" and "controls" were identified using conventional and molecular epidemiologic tools and compared. In addition, new infections were identified and compared in contacts of "cases" that died before treatment and contacts of their smear-matched "controls". Conditional logistic regression was used to find associations in both univariate and multivariate analysis. "Cases" were as, but not more, likely than "controls" to transmit. This was so whether transmission was measured in terms of the number of "cases" and smear-unmatched or -matched "controls" that had a secondary case, the number of secondary cases that they had or the number of new infections found in contacts of "cases" that died before treatment and their smear-matched "controls". In a low TB incidence/low HIV prevalence country, pulmonary TB patients that die a TB-related death before or in the initial phase of treatment and pulmonary TB patients that survive beyond the initial phase of treatment are equally likely to transmit.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Adults
Age
Aged
Case-Control Studies
Control methods
Death
Disease transmission
Epidemiology
Female
Health aspects
Humans
Infections
Intensive care
Laboratories
Male
Medical diagnosis
Medicine
Middle Aged
Morbidity
Mortality
Multivariate analysis
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Native North Americans
Nosocomial infections
Patients
Population
Prevalence
Public health
Regression analysis
Risk Factors
Sexually transmitted diseases
Smear
STD
Survival Analysis
Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis, Pulmonary - diagnosis
Tuberculosis, Pulmonary - mortality
Tuberculosis, Pulmonary - transmission
Young Adult
title Is early tuberculosis death associated with increased tuberculosis transmission?
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