Abstract

SummaryBackgroundPreventive therapy for tuberculosis reduces the risk of disease in people who have been infected but who are not sick. Countries with a high burden of tuberculosis that are expanding preventive therapy use must decide how tuberculosis infection testing should be used for risk stratification among household contacts of patients with tuberculosis.MethodsWe modelled the risks of tuberculosis disease and severe adverse events, comparing the following two preventive therapy strategies: preventive therapy for all household contacts, or preventive therapy for only household contacts with a positive tuberculin skin test (TST) result. We used data from clinical trials and literature on tuberculosis natural history to model outcomes, assuming different preventive therapy regimens, ages, and TST positivity prevalence.FindingsAssuming 25% prevalence of TST positivity among 1000 household contacts aged 0–17 years, a treat-all approach with isoniazid and rifapentine compared with a treat-TST-only approach led to 13 fewer incident tuberculosis cases (IQR −5 to −18) and four additional severe adverse events (2 to 6). With rifampicin, the difference was 11 fewer incident tuberculosis cases (–3 to −17) and two additional severe adverse events (1 to 3). For adults, a treat-all approach led to fewer incident tuberculosis cases, and additional adverse events increased with age. Assuming 25% prevalence of TST positivity among adult contacts, a treat-all approach would lead to around two fewer tuberculosis cases per 1000 contacts for all regimens; the number of additional severe adverse events ranged from seven (IQR 5 to 8) for 18 to 34-year-olds treated with rifampicin to 63 (50 to 74) for people older than 64 years treated with isoniazid and rifapentine. A rifampicin-only regimen was associated with the fewest additional severe adverse events (seven [IQR 5 to 8] per 1000 adults aged 18–34 years and 35–64 years, and 17 [9 to 23] per 1000 adults older than 64 years).InterpretationBased on the available data, giving preventive therapy to all household contacts would probably reduce the incidence of tuberculosis cases in high-burden settings. Adverse events could be minimised by using non-isoniazid regimens and, in adults older than 18 years, focusing treatment on individuals with a positive infection test.FundingBill & Melinda Gates Foundation, UK Medical Research Council, and UK Department for International Development.

Highlights

  • An estimated 10 million people develop tuberculosis globally every year, including 1 million children.[1]

  • Added value of this study To our knowledge, this study is the first to model both incident tuberculosis cases and adverse events associated with different preventive therapy strategies for contact management in highburden settings. We separately modelled these outcomes for different age groups and different preventive therapy regimens, and we compared strategies of treating all contacts and treating only contacts with positive tuberculin skin tests

  • Risk of tuberculosis disease progression was dependent on TST status and receipt of preventive therapy, and anyone who received preventive therapy had a risk of severe adverse events

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Summary

Introduction

An estimated 10 million people develop tuberculosis globally every year, including 1 million children.[1] When a person is infected with the bacterium that causes tuberculosis, disease might develop rapidly or after a period of time, with the highest risk of disease occurring in the irst 1–2 years.[2] If a person is infected but has not yet developed disease, the infection can be treated with preventive therapy. Clinical trials have established the efectiveness of preventive therapy to be 60–70% in reducing the risk of developing tuberculosis disease.[3] Mathematical modelling suggests that along with active case-inding and efective treatment, preventing the development of tuberculosis disease is a critical component of a comprehensive global tuberculosis strategy, without which tuberculosis elimination cannot be achieved.[4,5]. In settings with low tuberculosis incidence, preventive therapy is generally ofered to contacts who test positive for tuberculosis infection, www.thelancet.com/lancetgh Vol 8 May 2020

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