Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Over the last decades, TB has also emerged in the pediatric population. Epidemiologic data of childhood TB are still limited and there is an urgent need of more data on very large cohorts. A multicenter study was conducted in 27 pediatric hospitals, pediatric wards, and public health centers in Italy using a standardized form, covering the period of time between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2012. Children with active TB, latent TB, and those recently exposed to TB or recently adopted/immigrated from a high TB incidence country were enrolled. Overall, 4234 children were included; 554 (13.1%) children had active TB, 594 (14.0%) latent TB and 3086 (72.9%) were uninfected. Among children with active TB, 481 (86.8%) patients had pulmonary TB. The treatment of active TB cases was known for 96.4% (n = 534) of the cases. Overall, 210 (39.3%) out of these 534 children were treated with three and 216 (40.4%) with four first-line drugs. Second-line drugs where used in 87 (16.3%) children with active TB. Drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis were reported in 39 (7%) children. Improving the surveillance of childhood TB is important for public health care workers and pediatricians. A non-negligible proportion of children had drug-resistant TB and was treated with second-line drugs, most of which are off-label in the pediatric age. Future efforts should concentrate on improving active surveillance, diagnostic tools, and the availability of antitubercular pediatric formulations, also in low-endemic countries.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the leading causes of death worldwide [1]

  • Our Italian Register collects data on active and latent TB cases, TB contact and adopted/immigrated children screened for TB

  • Almost 70% of the cases occurred in children below five years of age and more than half of the cases were among immigrants [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the leading causes of death worldwide [1]. Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)-related immunodeficiency, immunosuppressive therapies and the spread of multidrug-resistant (MDR) strains have been recognized as the most important factors leading to an increased TB incidence [2]. Epidemiologic data on childhood TB are still limited. In 2013, the WHO estimated nine million (range 8.6–9.4 million) new TB cases/year, equivalent to 126 cases per 100,000 populations, with about 6% of those cases occurring in children [1]. The estimation methods presently have some limitations including misdiagnosis due to difficulties in childhood TB diagnosis, under-reporting and unavailability of age-disaggregated data. In 2013 the total number of new and relapsed cases among children was 275,000 in countries that reported age-disaggregated notification data for 2013 [1].

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