Abstract

BackgroundLatent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) is a mycobacterial infection defined on the basis of cellular immune response to mycobacterial antigens. The tuberculin skin test (TST) and the Interferon-Gamma Release Assay (IGRA) are the two tests currently used to establish the diagnosis of LTB. Literature suggests that a study regarding tuberculosis (TB) infection among women of reproductive age group is limited. MethodsFemale household contact, married, aged 18–49 years underwent written consent form and are screened for LTBI using the TST and IGRA. Participants are injected with TST [5 tuberculin unit (TU), purified protein derivative (PPD)] and IGRA [QuantiFERON®-TB Gold Plus kit (QFT-Plus)]. All the household contacts were followed-up for one year for incident TB cases. Statistical analysis was done using STATA version 14 (StataCorp., Texas, USA). Cohen's kappa test was used to determine the agreement between two tests. ResultsThe prevalence of LTBI was found to be 69% (either TST or IGRA positive). Positivity rate of IGRA was higher when compared to that of TST. Out of 139 participants, 68 (49%) tested positive for TST, 80 (57.6%) tested positive for IGRA and 52 (37.4%) tested positive for both. Discordant results were observed in about two fifth of the study population and there was poor agreement between the two tests. ConclusionLongitudinal studies are required to detect incident TB cases to evaluate the usefulness of these tests. The study was found that IGRA is more consistent to diagnosis of latent tuberculosis infection than the TST. Such studies can also be performed in varied settings among different populations which would help us to improve the diagnosis of LTBI and consequently help in TB control.

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