1. Community-Wide Universal HIV Test and Treat Intervention Reduces Tuberculosis Transmission in Rural Uganda: A Cluster-Randomized Trial.
- Author
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Marquez, Carina, Atukunda, Mucunguzi, Nugent, Joshua, Charlebois, Edwin D, Chamie, Gabriel, Mwangwa, Florence, Ssemmondo, Emmanuel, Kironde, Joel, Kabami, Jane, Owaraganise, Asiphas, Kakande, Elijah, Ssekaynzi, Bob, Abbott, Rachel, Ayieko, James, Ruel, Theodore, Kwariisima, Dalsone, Kamya, Moses, Petersen, Maya, Havlir, Diane V, and Balzer, Laura B
- Subjects
TUBERCULOSIS transmission ,TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,TUBERCULOSIS prevention ,PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,HIV infections ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio ,UNIVERSAL healthcare ,RURAL conditions ,TUBERCULIN test ,MEDICAL screening ,CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
Background Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) treatment reduces tuberculosis (TB) disease and mortality; however, the population-level impact of universal HIV-test-and-treat interventions on TB infection and transmission remain unclear. Methods In a sub-study nested in the SEARCH trial, a community cluster-randomized trial (NCT01864603), we assessed whether a universal HIV-test-and-treat intervention reduced population-level incident TB infection in rural Uganda. Intervention communities received annual, population-level HIV testing and patient-centered linkage. Control communities received population-level HIV testing at baseline and endline. We compared estimated incident TB infection by arms, defined by tuberculin skin test conversion in a cohort of persons aged 5 and older, adjusting for participation and predictors of infection, and accounting for clustering. Results Of the 32 trial communities, 9 were included, comprising 90 801 participants (43 127 intervention and 47 674 control). One-year cumulative incidence of TB infection was 16% in the intervention and 22% in the control; SEARCH reduced the population-level risk of incident TB infection by 27% (adjusted risk ratio = 0.73; 95% confidence interval [CI]:.57–.92, P =.005). In pre-specified analyses, the effect was largest among children aged 5–11 years and males. Conclusions A universal HIV-test-and-treat intervention reduced incident TB infection, a marker of population-level TB transmission. Investments in community-level HIV interventions have broader population-level benefits, including TB reductions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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