Abstract

BackgroundInternational contact-tracing (CT) following exposure during long-distance air travel is resource-intensive, whereas evidence for risk of tuberculosis (TB) transmission during international travel is weak. In this study, we systematically analyzed the information from international requests for CT received at the national level in Germany in order to evaluate the continued utility of the current approach and to identify areas for improvement.MethodsAn anonymized archive of international CT notifications received by the Robert Koch Institute between 2010 and 2018 was searched for key parameters for data collection. A total of 31 parameters, such as characteristics of TB patients and their identified contacts, were extracted from each CT notification and collated into a dataset. Descriptive data analysis and trend analyses were performed to identify key characteristics of CT notifications, patients, and contacts over the years.Results192 CT notifications, each corresponding to a single TB index case, were included in the study, increasing from 12 in 2010 to 41 in 2018. The majority of notifications (N = 130, 67.7%) concerned international air travel, followed by private contact (N = 39, 20.3%) and work exposure (N = 16, 8.3%). 159 (82.8%) patients had sputum smear results available, of which 147 (92.5%) were positive. Of 119 (62.0%) patients with drug susceptibility testing results, most (N = 92, 77.3%) had pan-sensitive TB, followed by 15 (12.6%) with multi-drug resistant TB. 115 (59.9%) patients had information on infectiousness, of whom 99 (86.1%) were considered infectious during the exposure period. 7 (5.3%) patients travelled on long-distance flights despite a prior diagnosis of active TB. Of the 771 contact persons, 34 (4.4%) could not be reached for CT measures due to lack of contact information.ConclusionThe high variability in completeness of information contained within the international CT requests emphasizes the need for international standards for reporting of CT information. With the large proportion of TB patients reported to have travelled while being infectious in our study, we feel that raising awareness among patients and health professionals to detect TB early and prevent international long-distance travel during the infectious disease phase should be a cornerstone strategy to safeguard against possible transmission during international travel.

Highlights

  • International contact-tracing (CT) following exposure during long-distance air travel is resourceintensive, whereas evidence for risk of tuberculosis (TB) transmission during international travel is weak

  • The objectives of this study are i) to create an inventory of the type and quantity of international CT notifications received by the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), ii) to summarize the characteristics of the TB cases and their contacts in Germany, and iii) to assess the quality and completeness of the CT information received in order to evaluate the continued utility of the current approach and to identify areas for improvement

  • Of the 62 index cases with other exposures, for which the German Central Committee against Tuberculosis (DZK) CT recommendations were applicable, only 10 (16.1%) notifications provided information on cumulative duration of exposure and either smear microscopy results or laboratory culture results for the index case, which are important to assess the need for CT for incidents that are not related to air travel

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Summary

Introduction

International contact-tracing (CT) following exposure during long-distance air travel is resourceintensive, whereas evidence for risk of tuberculosis (TB) transmission during international travel is weak. Epidemiological contact-tracing (CT) is considered to be crucial for the prevention of further transmission of a number of infectious diseases [1]. Several studies have shown that in low incidence countries, new cases of TB can be attributed to recent transmission [8,9,10,11,12,13]. Early detection of new TB cases and the prevention of further transmission of TB is a crucial component in many TB control plans in low incidence countries [2, 3, 14]

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