Abstract
One principle of tuberculosis control is to prevent the development of tuberculosis disease by treating individuals with latent tuberculosis infection. The diagnosis of latent infection using the tuberculin skin test is not straightforward because of concerns about immunologic cross reactivity with the Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine and environmental mycobacteria. To parse the effects of BCG vaccine and environmental mycobacteria on the tuberculin skin test, we estimated the frequency distribution of skin test results in two divisions of Kampala, Uganda, ten years apart. We then used mixture models to estimate parameters for underlying distributions and defined clinically meaningful criteria for latent infection, including an indeterminate category. Using percentiles of two underlying normal distributions, we defined two skin test readings to demarcate three ranges. Values of 10 mm or greater contained 90% of individuals with latent infection; values less than 7.2 mm contained 80% of individuals without infection. Contacts with values between 7.2 and 10 mm fell into an indeterminate zone where it was not possible to assign infection. We conclude that systematic tuberculin skin test surveys within populations at risk, combined with mixture model analysis, may be a reproducible, evidence-based approach to define meaningful criteria for latent tuberculosis infection.
Highlights
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the global burden of tuberculosis peaked in 2000 and has since declined by 1.5% per year [1]
In September 2018, the United Nations General Assembly held a high-level meeting to build political commitment and multisectoral action to eliminate tuberculosis [3]. With this new commitment to tuberculosis control, the Stop TB Partnership and the WHO advocate for treatment of latent tuberculosis infection as a way to reduce the risk of tuberculosis among individuals at highest risk for disease [4]
We found that the overall frequency distribution for each group could be decomposed into two normal distributions that had remarkably similar mean TST values between the two groups
Summary
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the global burden of tuberculosis peaked in 2000 and has since declined by 1.5% per year [1] Encouraging, this modest progress falls short of the Millennial Development Goals for tuberculosis elimination. In September 2018, the United Nations General Assembly held a high-level meeting to build political commitment and multisectoral action to eliminate tuberculosis [3]. With this new commitment to tuberculosis control, the Stop TB Partnership and the WHO advocate for treatment of latent tuberculosis infection as a way to reduce the risk of tuberculosis among individuals at highest risk for disease [4]. Treatment of latent infection confers benefit to the individual but may confer benefit to a population by shrinking the pool of infected individuals at risk for disease progression
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