2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinf.2013.12.005
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Yield of tuberculosis contact investigation in a low-incidence country

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The yield per contact of active TB among contacts of pulmonary index cases presented here (2.6%) is high relative to other studies in high-income settings. A systematic review of contact tracing outcomes found a grouped yield per contact of TB in high-income countries of 1.4%, 8 a similar study to ours in Italy found a yield per contact of active disease of 0.71%, 17 and a study in Amsterdam found 0.79% of contacts had prevalent TB and 0.39% incident TB, 18 although these comparisons do not account for differences in smear-positivity prevalence. There are no comparable estimates of the yield per contact of LTBI among child contacts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The yield per contact of active TB among contacts of pulmonary index cases presented here (2.6%) is high relative to other studies in high-income settings. A systematic review of contact tracing outcomes found a grouped yield per contact of TB in high-income countries of 1.4%, 8 a similar study to ours in Italy found a yield per contact of active disease of 0.71%, 17 and a study in Amsterdam found 0.79% of contacts had prevalent TB and 0.39% incident TB, 18 although these comparisons do not account for differences in smear-positivity prevalence. There are no comparable estimates of the yield per contact of LTBI among child contacts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
“… 11 It is also comparable to recent findings from the USA where the corresponding figures were 94% and 86% for smear-positive and smear-negative, culture-positive index cases, respectively, 24 and higher than the figure in Piedmont, Italy (77%). 17 Similarly, the proportion of identified contacts who were evaluated (88%) was higher than the north central London (74% precohort review, 82% postcohort review) and US figures (82% for smear-positives, 81% for smear-negatives). These figures suggest London TB clinics undertake high quality contact tracing, although further improvements in certain groups may be feasible.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…It has been well documented that household exposure to a known TB case is the primary risk factor for TB [12], especially for children [13]. Adolescents, therefore, may acquire TB infection at school [14] or from the household [15,16]. Clearly in China there is a lack of studies comparing the roles of households and of the classroom in adolescent TB transmission.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similar to Sweden, the risk was also higher among children born in a TB endemic country [ 16 ]. Close-contact investigations among immigrant population have been shown to be cost-effective, although foreign-born contacts are more likely to remain unidentified [ 21 , 22 ]. It is likely that investigations among the immigrant community identify also old infections resulting from TB exposure abroad.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%