Abstract

BackgroundWe estimate the proportion of tuberculosis (TB) in England due to recent household transmission, identify factors associated with being a household transmitter, and investigate the impact that identification of a case has on time to treatment of subsequent cases.MethodsTB cases notified between 2010 and 2012 in England in the same household as another case were identified; 24 locus MIRU-VNTR strain typing (ST) was used to identify household cases with likely recent transmission. Treatment delay in index and subsequent cases was compared. Risk factors for being a household transmitter were identified in univariable and multivariable analyses.ResultsOverall, 7.7% (1849/24,060) of TB cases lived in a household with another case. We estimate that 3.9% were due to recent household transmission. ST data was unavailable for 67% (1242) of household pairs. For those with ST data, 64% (386) had confirmed, 11% probable (66) and 25% (155) refuted household transmission. The median treatment delay was 65 days for index cases and 37 days for subsequent asymptomatic cases. Risk factors for being a household transmitter included being under 25 years old, UK-born with Black African, Indian or Pakistani ethnicity, or born in Somalia or Romania.ConclusionsThis study has a number of implications for household TB contact tracing in low incidence countries, including the potential to reduce the diagnostic delay for subsequent household cases and the benefit of using ST to identify when to conduct source contact tracing outside the household. As 25% of TB cases in households had discordant strains, households with multiple TB cases do not necessarily represent household transmission. The additional fact that 25% of index cases within households only had extra-pulmonary TB demonstrates that, if household contact tracing is limited to pulmonary TB cases (as recently recommended in UK guidelines), additional cases of active TB in households will be missed. Our finding that no lineage of TB was associated with recent household transmission and with no increased transmissibility in the Beijing lineage compared to others, suggests that the lineage need not impact contact tracing efforts. Improvements in contact tracing have the potential to reduce transmission of TB in low incidence countries.

Highlights

  • We estimate the proportion of tuberculosis (TB) in England due to recent household transmission, identify factors associated with being a household transmitter, and investigate the impact that identification of a case has on time to treatment of subsequent cases

  • Applying the n-1 method [16] to account for the index case in households where transmission was not refuted, 3.9% ((1645 household cases- 718 households)/24,060 cases) of TB cases in England were estimated to be due to recent household transmission

  • Whilst we might expect UK-born cases to be due to recent transmission in the UK, the fact that 10% of UK-born TB cases lived in a household with two or more cases suggests that earlier diagnosis and improved contact tracing could have an important impact in this group

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Summary

Introduction

We estimate the proportion of tuberculosis (TB) in England due to recent household transmission, identify factors associated with being a household transmitter, and investigate the impact that identification of a case has on time to treatment of subsequent cases. In England, a high proportion of TB cases are born abroad (73% in 2015), many of whom are likely to have been infected in their country of birth and reactivated in England [1]. Epidemiological data alone may either underestimate recent transmission (when there are no recognised epidemiological links) or overestimate recent transmission, especially in populations with an increased risk of TB, for example where there are a sizable number of persons who have immigrated from a high TB burden country, as evidenced by the utility of strain typing (ST) for refuting transmission [2]. ST data alone may overestimate recent transmission due to common strains circulating both in England and abroad [1]. Combining both epidemiological and ST data should provide better estimates of recent transmission

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