111 results on '"Houben, Rein M G J"'
Search Results
2. Classification of early tuberculosis states to guide research for improved care and prevention: an international Delphi consensus exercise
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Alland, David, Behr, Marcel A, Beko, Busisiwe B, Burhan, Erlina, Churchyard, Gavin, Cobelens, Frank, Denholm, Justin T, Dinkele, Ryan, Ellner, Jerrold J, Fatima, Razia, Haigh, Kate A, Hatherill, Mark, Horton, Katherine C, Kendall, Emily A, Khan, Palwasha Y, MacPherson, Peter, Malherbe, Stephanus T, Mave, Vidya, Mendelsohn, Simon C, Musvosvi, Munyaradzi, Nemes, Elisa, Penn-Nicholson, Adam, Ramamurthy, Dharanidharan, Rangaka, Molebogeng X, Sahu, Suvanand, Schwalb, Alvaro, Shah, Divya K, Sheerin, Dylan, Simon, Donald, Steyn, Adrie J C, Thu Anh, Nguyen, Walzl, Gerhard, Weller, Charlotte L, Williams, Caroline ML, Wong, Emily B, Wood, Robin, Xie, Yingda L, Yi, Siyan, Coussens, Anna K, Zaidi, Syed M A, Allwood, Brian W, Dewan, Puneet K, Gray, Glenda, Kohli, Mikashmi, Kredo, Tamara, Marais, Ben J, Marks, Guy B, Martinez, Leo, Ruhwald, Morten, Scriba, Thomas J, Seddon, James A, Tisile, Phumeza, Warner, Digby F, Wilkinson, Robert J, Esmail, Hanif, and Houben, Rein M G J
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- 2024
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3. Global burden of disease due to rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis: a mathematical modeling analysis
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Menzies, Nicolas A., Allwood, Brian W., Dean, Anna S., Dodd, Pete J., Houben, Rein M. G. J., James, Lyndon P., Knight, Gwenan M., Meghji, Jamilah, Nguyen, Linh N., Rachow, Andrea, Schumacher, Samuel G., Mirzayev, Fuad, and Cohen, Ted
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- 2023
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4. Evaluating the equity impact and cost-effectiveness of digital adherence technologies with differentiated care to support tuberculosis treatment adherence in Ethiopia: protocol and analysis plan for the health economics component of a cluster randomised trial
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Foster, Nicola, Tadesse, Amare W., McQuaid, Christopher Finn, Gosce, Lara, Abdurhman, Tofik, Assefa, Demelash, Bedru, Ahmed, Houben, Rein M. G. J., van Kalmthout, Kristian, Letta, Taye, Mohammed, Zemedu, van Rest, Job, Umeta, Demekech G., Weldemichael, Gedion T., Yazew, Hiwot, Jerene, Degu, Quaife, Matthew, and Fielding, Katherine L.
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- 2023
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5. Quantifying progression and regression across the spectrum of pulmonary tuberculosis: a data synthesis study
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Richards, Alexandra S, Sossen, Bianca, Emery, Jon C, Horton, Katherine C, Heinsohn, Torben, Frascella, Beatrice, Balzarini, Federica, Oradini-Alacreu, Aurea, Häcker, Brit, Odone, Anna, McCreesh, Nicky, Grant, Alison D, Kranzer, Katharina, Cobelens, Frank, Esmail, Hanif, and Houben, Rein M G J
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- 2023
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6. Estimating the Impact of Tuberculosis Pathways on Transmission—What Is the Gap Left by Passive Case Finding?
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Horton, Katherine C, McCaffrey, Ty, Richards, Alexandra S, Schwalb, Alvaro, and Houben, Rein M G J
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TUBERCULOSIS ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Current passive case-finding policies have not resulted in the expected decline in tuberculosis incidence. Recognition of the variety of disease pathways experienced by individuals with tuberculosis highlights how many are not served by the current prevention and care system and how much transmission is missed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Impact of active case finding for tuberculosis with mass chest X-ray screening in Glasgow, Scotland, 1950–1963: An epidemiological analysis of historical data.
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MacPherson, Peter, Stagg, Helen R., Schwalb, Alvaro, Henderson, Hazel, Taylor, Alice E., Burke, Rachael M., Rickman, Hannah M., Miller, Cecily, Houben, Rein M. G. J., Dodd, Peter J., and Corbett, Elizabeth L.
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EPIDEMIOLOGY ,SLUM clearance ,TIME series analysis ,BCG vaccines ,MEDICAL screening - Abstract
Background: Community active case finding (ACF) for tuberculosis was widely implemented in Europe and North America between 1940 and 1970, when incidence was comparable to many present-day high-burden countries. Using an interrupted time series analysis, we analysed the effect of the 1957 Glasgow mass chest X-ray campaign to inform contemporary approaches to screening. Methods and findings: Case notifications for 1950 to 1963 were extracted from public health records and linked to demographic data. We fitted Bayesian multilevel regression models to estimate annual relative case notification rates (CNRs) during and after a mass screening intervention implemented over 5 weeks in 1957 compared to the counterfactual scenario where the intervention had not occurred. We additionally estimated case detection ratios and incidence. From 11 March 1957 to 12 April 1957, 714,915 people (622,349 of 819,301 [76.0%] resident adults ≥15 years) were screened with miniature chest X-ray; 2,369 (0.4%) were diagnosed with tuberculosis. Pre-intervention (1950 to 1956), pulmonary CNRs were declining at 2.3% per year from a CNR of 222/100,000 in 1950. With the intervention in 1957, there was a doubling in the pulmonary CNR (RR: 1.95, 95% uncertainty interval [UI] [1.81, 2.11]) and 35% decline in the year after (RR: 0.65, 95% UI [0.59, 0.71]). Post-intervention (1958 to 1963) annual rates of decline (5.4% per year) were greater (RR: 0.77, 95% UI [0.69, 0.85]), and there were an estimated 4,599 (95% UI [3,641, 5,683]) pulmonary case notifications averted due to the intervention. Effects were consistent across all city wards and notifications declined in young children (0 to 5 years) with the intervention. Limitations include the lack of data in historical reports on microbiological testing for tuberculosis, and uncertainty in contributory effects of other contemporaneous interventions including slum clearances, introduction of BCG vaccination programmes, and the ending of postwar food rationing. Conclusions: A single, rapid round of mass screening with chest X-ray (probably the largest ever conducted) likely resulted in a major and sustained reduction in tuberculosis case notifications. Synthesis of evidence from other historical tuberculosis screening programmes is needed to confirm findings from Glasgow and to provide insights into ongoing efforts to successfully implement ACF interventions in today's high tuberculosis burden countries and with new screening tools and technologies. Peter MacPherson and colleagues analyze public health records and demographics data using an interrupted time series approach to explore the effect of the 1957 Glasgow mass chest X-ray campaign for tuberculosis case finding. Author summary: Why was this study done?: Tuberculosis screening is conditionally recommended by the World Health Organization for populations with a high prevalence of disease or other structural risk factors. There is considerable uncertainty over the optimal approaches and population impact of tuberculosis screening. Between 1930 and 1970, mass screening for tuberculosis was widely undertaken, in Europe and North America, but there has been little attempt to understand what effect these programmes had on the trajectory of tuberculosis epidemics. What did the researchers do and find?: Over a 5-week period, in 1957, the city of Glasgow, Scotland implemented a tuberculosis screening programme comprising mass miniature X-ray of around 715,000 people supported by community mobilisation. Tuberculosis notification data and population demographics were extracted from city Medical Officer of Health reports between 1950 and 1963, and multilevel interrupted time series regression models were constructed to investigate the effect of the mass screening campaign on tuberculosis notifications, compared to the counterfactual scenario where the intervention had not occurred. Before the mass screening intervention (1950 to 1956), tuberculosis notification rates were declining at 2.3% per year, and rates doubled in the year of the intervention (1957). Post-intervention, tuberculosis notification rates declined at 5.4% per year, and there were an estimated 4,599 pulmonary notifications averted. Intervention effects were consistent across all 37 city wards, but showed differing effects by age group and sex. What do these findings mean?: A single, rapid, and high coverage round of mass tuberculosis screening, supported by intensive community mobilisation, likely had a major impact on changing the tuberculosis epidemiology trajectory in Glasgow. Greater understanding of how improved housing, social conditions, and tuberculosis care and prevention contributed to this screening effect is needed. Synthesis of evidence from other historical tuberculosis screening programmes is needed to confirm findings from Glasgow, and to support efforts to successfully implement active case finding (ACF) interventions in today's high tuberculosis burden countries and with new screening tools and technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Lifetime burden of disease due to incident tuberculosis: a global reappraisal including post-tuberculosis sequelae
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Menzies, Nicolas A, Quaife, Matthew, Allwood, Brian W, Byrne, Anthony L, Coussens, Anna K, Harries, Anthony D, Marx, Florian M, Meghji, Jamilah, Pedrazzoli, Debora, Salomon, Joshua A, Sweeney, Sedona, van Kampen, Sanne C, Wallis, Robert S, Houben, Rein M G J, and Cohen, Ted
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- 2021
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9. Routine childhood immunisation during the COVID-19 pandemic in Africa: a benefit–risk analysis of health benefits versus excess risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection
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Houben, Rein M G J, Edmunds, W John, Villabona-Arenas, Christian Julian, Atkins, Katherine E, Knight, Gwenan M, Sun, Fiona Yueqian, Auzenbergs, Megan, Rosello, Alicia, Klepac, Petra, Hellewell, Joel, Russell, Timothy W, Tully, Damien C, Emery, Jon C, Gibbs, Hamish P, Munday, James D, Quilty, Billy J, Diamond, Charlie, Pearson, Carl A B, Leclerc, Quentin J, Nightingale, Emily S, Liu, Yang, Endo, Akira, Deol, Arminder K, Kucharski, Adam J, Abbott, Sam, Jarvis, Christopher I, O'Reilly, Kathleen, Jombart, Thibaut, Gimma, Amy, Bosse, Nikos I, Prem, Kiesha, Hué, Stéphane, Davies, Nicholas G, Eggo, Rosalind M, Clifford, Samuel, Medley, Graham, Abbas, Kaja, Procter, Simon R, van Zandvoort, Kevin, Clark, Andrew, Funk, Sebastian, Mengistu, Tewodaj, Hogan, Dan, Dansereau, Emily, Jit, Mark, and Flasche, Stefan
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- 2020
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10. Effectiveness of isolation, testing, contact tracing, and physical distancing on reducing transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in different settings: a mathematical modelling study
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Emery, Jon C, Medley, Graham, Munday, James D, Russell, Timothy W, Leclerc, Quentin J, Diamond, Charlie, Procter, Simon R, Gimma, Amy, Sun, Fiona Yueqian, Gibbs, Hamish P, Rosello, Alicia, van Zandvoort, Kevin, Hué, Stéphane, Meakin, Sophie R, Deol, Arminder K, Knight, Gwen, Jombart, Thibaut, Foss, Anna M, Bosse, Nikos I, Atkins, Katherine E, Quilty, Billy J, Lowe, Rachel, Prem, Kiesha, Flasche, Stefan, Pearson, Carl A B, Houben, Rein M G J, Nightingale, Emily S, Endo, Akira, Tully, Damien C, Liu, Yang, Villabona-Arenas, Julian, O'Reilly, Kathleen, Funk, Sebastian, Eggo, Rosalind M, Jit, Mark, Rees, Eleanor M, Hellewell, Joel, Clifford, Samuel, Jarvis, Christopher I, Abbott, Sam, Auzenbergs, Megan, Davies, Nicholas G, Simons, David, Kucharski, Adam J, Klepac, Petra, Conlan, Andrew J K, Kissler, Stephen M, Tang, Maria L, Fry, Hannah, Gog, Julia R, and Edmunds, W John
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- 2020
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11. Global, regional, and national estimates of the population at increased risk of severe COVID-19 due to underlying health conditions in 2020: a modelling study
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Nightingale, Emily S, O'Reilly, Kathleen, Jombart, Thibaut, Edmunds, W John, Rosello, Alicia, Sun, Fiona Yueqian, Atkins, Katherine E, Bosse, Nikos I, Clifford, Samuel, Russell, Timothy W, Deol, Arminder K, Liu, Yang, Procter, Simon R, Leclerc, Quentin J, Medley, Graham, Knight, Gwen, Munday, James D, Kucharski, Adam J, Pearson, Carl A B, Klepac, Petra, Prem, Kiesha, Houben, Rein M G J, Endo, Akira, Flasche, Stefan, Davies, Nicholas G, Diamond, Charlie, van Zandvoort, Kevin, Funk, Sebastian, Auzenbergs, Megan, Rees, Eleanor M, Tully, Damien C, Emery, Jon C, Quilty, Billy J, Abbott, Sam, Villabona-Arenas, Ch Julian, Hué, Stéphane, Hellewell, Joel, Gimma, Amy, Jarvis, Christopher I, Clark, Andrew, Jit, Mark, Warren-Gash, Charlotte, Guthrie, Bruce, Wang, Harry H X, Mercer, Stewart W, Sanderson, Colin, McKee, Martin, Troeger, Christopher, Ong, Kanyin L, Checchi, Francesco, Perel, Pablo, Joseph, Sarah, Gibbs, Hamish P, Banerjee, Amitava, and Eggo, Rosalind M
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- 2020
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12. Effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions on COVID-19 cases, deaths, and demand for hospital services in the UK: a modelling study
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Jombart, Thibaut, O'Reilly, Kathleen, Endo, Akira, Hellewell, Joel, Nightingale, Emily S, Quilty, Billy J, Jarvis, Christopher I, Russell, Timothy W, Klepac, Petra, Bosse, Nikos I, Funk, Sebastian, Abbott, Sam, Medley, Graham F, Gibbs, Hamish, Pearson, Carl A B, Flasche, Stefan, Jit, Mark, Clifford, Samuel, Prem, Kiesha, Diamond, Charlie, Emery, Jon, Deol, Arminder K, Procter, Simon R, van Zandvoort, Kevin, Sun, Yueqian Fiona, Munday, James D, Rosello, Alicia, Auzenbergs, Megan, Knight, Gwen, Houben, Rein M G J, Liu, Yang, Davies, Nicholas G, Kucharski, Adam J, Eggo, Rosalind M, Gimma, Amy, and Edmunds, W John
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- 2020
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13. Global burden of latent multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: trends and estimates based on mathematical modelling
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Knight, Gwenan M, McQuaid, C Finn, Dodd, Peter J, and Houben, Rein M G J
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- 2019
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14. Classification of early tuberculosis states to guide research for improved care and prevention: an international Delphi consensus exercise.
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Coussens, Anna K, Zaidi, Syed M A, Allwood, Brian W, Dewan, Puneet K, Gray, Glenda, Kohli, Mikashmi, Kredo, Tamara, Marais, Ben J, Marks, Guy B, Martinez, Leo, Ruhwald, Morten, Scriba, Thomas J, Seddon, James A, Tisile, Phumeza, Warner, Digby F, Wilkinson, Robert J, Esmail, Hanif, and Houben, Rein M G J
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DELPHI method ,TUBERCULOSIS ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,EVIDENCE gaps ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
The current active–latent paradigm of tuberculosis largely neglects the documented spectrum of disease. Inconsistency with regard to definitions, terminology, and diagnostic criteria for different tuberculosis states has limited the progress in research and product development that are needed to achieve tuberculosis elimination. We aimed to develop a new framework of classification for tuberculosis that accommodates key disease states but is sufficiently simple to support pragmatic research and implementation. Through an international Delphi exercise that involved 71 participants representing a wide range of disciplines, sectors, income settings, and geographies, consensus was reached on a set of conceptual states, related terminology, and research gaps. The International Consensus for Early TB (ICE-TB) framework distinguishes disease from infection by the presence of macroscopic pathology and defines two subclinical and two clinical tuberculosis states on the basis of reported symptoms or signs of tuberculosis, further differentiated by likely infectiousness. The presence of viable Mycobacterium tuberculosis and an associated host response are prerequisites for all states of infection and disease. Our framework provides a clear direction for tuberculosis research, which will, in time, improve tuberculosis clinical care and elimination policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The impact of social protection and poverty elimination on global tuberculosis incidence: a statistical modelling analysis of Sustainable Development Goal 1
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Carter, Daniel J, Glaziou, Philippe, Lönnroth, Knut, Siroka, Andrew, Floyd, Katherine, Weil, Diana, Raviglione, Mario, Houben, Rein M G J, and Boccia, Delia
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- 2018
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16. Social determinants of the changing tuberculosis prevalence in Viá»t Nam: Analysis of population-level cross-sectional studies
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Foster, Nicola, Nguyen, Hai V., Nguyen, Nhung V., Nguyen, Hoa B., Tiemersma, Edine W., Cobelens, Frank G. J., Quaife, Matthew, and Houben, Rein M. G. J.
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Prevalence studies (Epidemiology) ,Tuberculosis -- Statistics -- Social aspects -- Demographic aspects ,Economic growth -- Evaluation -- Health aspects ,Poor -- Health aspects -- Statistics ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Background An ecological relationship between economic development and reduction in tuberculosis prevalence has been observed. Between 2007 and 2017, Viá»t Nam experienced rapid economic development with equitable distribution of resources and a 37% reduction in tuberculosis prevalence. Analysing consecutive prevalence surveys, we examined how the reduction in tuberculosis (and subclinical tuberculosis) prevalence was concentrated between socioeconomic groups. Methods and findings We combined data from 2 nationally representative Viá»t Nam tuberculosis prevalence surveys with provincial-level measures of poverty. Data from 94,156 (2007) and 61,763 (2017) individuals were included. Of people with microbiologically confirmed tuberculosis, 21.6% (47/218) in 2007 and 29.0% (36/124) in 2017 had subclinical disease. We constructed an asset index using principal component analysis of consumption data. An illness concentration index was estimated to measure socioeconomic position inequality in tuberculosis prevalence. The illness concentration index changed from -0.10 (95% CI -0.08, -0.16; p = 0.003) in 2007 to 0.07 (95% CI 0.06, 0.18; p = 0.158) in 2017, indicating that tuberculosis was concentrated among the poorest households in 2007, with a shift towards more equal distribution between rich and poor households in 2017. This finding was similar for subclinical tuberculosis. We fitted multilevel models to investigate relationships between change in tuberculosis prevalence, individual risks, household socioeconomic position, and neighbourhood poverty. Controlling for provincial poverty level reduced the difference in prevalence, suggesting that changes in neighbourhood poverty contribute to the explanation of change in tuberculosis prevalence. A limitation of our study is that while tuberculosis prevalence surveys are valuable for understanding socioeconomic differences in tuberculosis prevalence in countries, given that tuberculosis is a relatively rare disease in the population studied, there is limited power to explore socioeconomic drivers. However, combining repeated cross-sectional surveys with provincial deprivation estimates during a period of remarkable economic growth provides valuable insights into the dynamics of the relationship between tuberculosis and economic development in Viá»t Nam. Conclusions We found that with equitable economic growth and a reduction in tuberculosis burden, tuberculosis became less concentrated among the poor in Viá»t Nam., Author(s): Nicola Foster 1,2,*, Hai V. Nguyen 3,4,5, Nhung V. Nguyen 3, Hoa B. Nguyen 3, Edine W. Tiemersma 6, Frank G. J. Cobelens 4,5, Matthew Quaife 1,2, Rein M. [...]
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- 2022
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17. Catastrophic costs potentially averted by tuberculosis control in India and South Africa: a modelling study
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Verguet, Stéphane, Riumallo-Herl, Carlos, Gomez, Gabriela B, Menzies, Nicolas A, Houben, Rein M G J, Sumner, Tom, Lalli, Marek, White, Richard G, Salomon, Joshua A, Cohen, Ted, Foster, Nicola, Chatterjee, Susmita, Sweeney, Sedona, Baena, Inés Garcia, Lönnroth, Knut, Weil, Diana E, and Vassall, Anna
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- 2017
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18. Recent Travel and Tuberculosis in Migrants: Data From a Low-Incidence Country.
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Schwalb, Alvaro, Kayumba, Kumvana, Houben, Rein M G J, and Bothamley, Graham H
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,NATIONAL health services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,AUDITING ,RESEARCH funding ,NOMADS ,TRAVEL ,TRAVEL hygiene ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CLINICAL pathology ,MEDICAL screening ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EARLY diagnosis ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DISEASE incidence ,TIME ,TUBERCULOSIS ,DISEASE progression ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) incidence rates among migrants are higher than those in low-incidence countries. We evaluated smear-positive, pulmonary TB notifications of foreign-born individuals, comparing time since arrival and time since last return travel to the country of origin. TB incidence suggests a time course consistent with recent infection during travel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Cost-effectiveness and resource implications of aggressive action on tuberculosis in China, India, and South Africa: a combined analysis of nine models
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Menzies, Nicolas A, Gomez, Gabriela B, Bozzani, Fiammetta, Chatterjee, Susmita, Foster, Nicola, Baena, Ines Garcia, Laurence, Yoko V, Qiang, Sun, Siroka, Andrew, Sweeney, Sedona, Verguet, Stéphane, Arinaminpathy, Nimalan, Azman, Andrew S, Bendavid, Eran, Chang, Stewart T, Cohen, Ted, Denholm, Justin T, Dowdy, David W, Eckhoff, Philip A, Goldhaber-Fiebert, Jeremy D, Handel, Andreas, Huynh, Grace H, Lalli, Marek, Lin, Hsien-Ho, Mandal, Sandip, McBryde, Emma S, Pandey, Surabhi, Salomon, Joshua A, Suen, Sze-chuan, Sumner, Tom, Trauer, James M, Wagner, Bradley G, Whalen, Christopher C, Wu, Chieh-Yin, Boccia, Delia, Chadha, Vineet K, Charalambous, Salome, Chin, Daniel P, Churchyard, Gavin, Daniels, Colleen, Dewan, Puneet, Ditiu, Lucica, Eaton, Jeffrey W, Grant, Alison D, Hippner, Piotr, Hosseini, Mehran, Mametja, David, Pretorius, Carel, Pillay, Yogan, Rade, Kiran, Sahu, Suvanand, Wang, Lixia, Houben, Rein M G J, Kimerling, Michael E, White, Richard G, and Vassall, Anna
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- 2016
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20. Feasibility of achieving the 2025 WHO global tuberculosis targets in South Africa, China, and India: a combined analysis of 11 mathematical models
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Houben, Rein M G J, Menzies, Nicolas A, Sumner, Tom, Huynh, Grace H, Arinaminpathy, Nimalan, Goldhaber-Fiebert, Jeremy D, Lin, Hsien-Ho, Wu, Chieh-Yin, Mandal, Sandip, Pandey, Surabhi, Suen, Sze-chuan, Bendavid, Eran, Azman, Andrew S, Dowdy, David W, Bacaër, Nicolas, Rhines, Allison S, Feldman, Marcus W, Handel, Andreas, Whalen, Christopher C, Chang, Stewart T, Wagner, Bradley G, Eckhoff, Philip A, Trauer, James M, Denholm, Justin T, McBryde, Emma S, Cohen, Ted, Salomon, Joshua A, Pretorius, Carel, Lalli, Marek, Eaton, Jeffrey W, Boccia, Delia, Hosseini, Mehran, Gomez, Gabriela B, Sahu, Suvanand, Daniels, Colleen, Ditiu, Lucica, Chin, Daniel P, Wang, Lixia, Chadha, Vineet K, Rade, Kiran, Dewan, Puneet, Hippner, Piotr, Charalambous, Salome, Grant, Alison D, Churchyard, Gavin, Pillay, Yogan, Mametja, L David, Kimerling, Michael E, Vassall, Anna, and White, Richard G
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- 2016
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21. Impact of Reversion of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Immunoreactivity Tests on the Estimated Annual Risk of Tuberculosis Infection.
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Schwalb, Alvaro, Emery, Jon C, Dale, Katie D, Horton, Katherine C, Ugarte-Gil, César A, and Houben, Rein M G J
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TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,TUBERCULOSIS risk factors ,INTERFERON gamma release tests ,RISK assessment ,SURVEYS ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,TUBERCULIN test ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,DISEASE prevalence ,RESEARCH funding ,CHILDREN - Abstract
A key metric in tuberculosis epidemiology is the annual risk of infection (ARI), which is usually derived from tuberculin skin test (TST) and interferon-γ release assay (IGRA) prevalence surveys carried out in children. Derivation of the ARI assumes that immunoreactivity is persistent over time; however, reversion of immunoreactivity has long been documented. We used a deterministic, compartmental model of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection to explore the impact of reversion on ARI estimation using age-specific reversion probabilities for the TST and IGRA. Using empirical data on TST reversion (22.2%/year for persons aged ≤19 years), the true ARI was 2–5 times higher than that estimated from immunoreactivity studies in children aged 8–12 years. Applying empirical reversion probabilities for the IGRA (9.9%/year for youths aged 12–18 years) showed a 1.5- to 2-fold underestimation. ARIs are increasingly underestimated in older populations, due to the cumulative impact of reversion on population reactivity over time. Declines in annual risk did not largely affect the results. Ignoring reversion leads to a stark underestimation of the true ARI in populations and our interpretation of Mtb transmission intensity. In future surveys, researchers should adjust for the reversion probability and its cumulative effect with increasing age to obtain a more accurate reflection of the burden and dynamics of Mtb infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. Improving the quality of the Global Burden of Disease tuberculosis estimates from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.
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Dodd, Peter J, McQuaid, Christopher Finn, Rao, Prasada, Abubakar, Ibrahim, Arinaminpathy, Nimalan, Carnegie, Anna, Cobelens, Frank, Dowdy, David, Fiekert, Kathy, Grant, Alison D, Wu, Jing, Nfii, Faith Nekabari, Shaikh, Nabila, Houben, Rein M G J, and White, Richard G
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GLOBAL burden of disease ,TUBERCULOSIS ,STATISTICAL smoothing ,BUSINESS communication ,THEORY of change - Abstract
This article examines the disparities between tuberculosis burden estimates provided by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). The authors emphasize the importance of clearer explanations and reproducibility of IHME's methods. They suggest enhancing comparisons and dialogue between IHME and WHO to better understand the differences in data and methodologies. The article also proposes considering method changes to incorporate country-specific data and addressing inconsistencies in epidemiological patterns. Additionally, the authors recommend exploring statistical smoothing in the estimates and utilizing covariates to capture changes in TB programs. The article further discusses the use of projection estimates by IHME for predicting future disease burden, particularly for TB. The authors recommend that IHME take into account programmatic changes for TB in their methodology and emphasize the need for stronger explanations of methods, comparisons, and dialogue with WHO, as well as improved communication with stakeholders. While acknowledging the value of both IHME and WHO estimates, the authors identify areas for improvement. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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23. Reevaluating progression and pathways following Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection within the spectrum of tuberculosis.
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Horton, Katherine C., Richards, Alexandra S., Emery, Jon C., Esmail, Hanif, and Houben, Rein M. G. J.
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TUBERCULOSIS patients ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,MYCOBACTERIAL diseases ,TUBERCULOSIS ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,DISEASE progression - Abstract
Traditional understanding of the risk of progression from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection to tuberculosis (TB) overlooks diverse presentations across a spectrum of disease. We developed a deterministic model of Mtb infection and minimal (pathological damage but not infectious), subclinical (infectious but no reported symptoms), and clinical (infectious and symptomatic) TB, informed by a rigorous evaluation of data from a systematic review of TB natural history. Using a Bayesian approach, we calibrated the model to data from historical cohorts that followed tuberculin-negative individuals to tuberculin conversion and TB, as well as data from cohorts that followed progression and regression between disease states, disease state prevalence ratios, disease duration, and mortality. We estimated incidence, pathways, and 10-y outcomes following Mtb infection for a simulated cohort. Then, 92.0% (95% uncertainty interval, UI, 91.4 to 92.5) of individuals self-cleared within 10 y of infection, while 7.9% (95% UI 7.4 to 8.5) progressed to TB. Of those, 68.6% (95% UI 65.4 to 72.0) developed infectious disease, and 33.2% (95% UI 29.9 to 36.4) progressed to clinical disease. While 98% of progression to minimal disease occurred within 2 y of infection, only 71% and 44% of subclinical and clinical disease, respectively, occurred within this period. Multiple progression pathways from infection were necessary to calibrate the model and 49.5% (95% UI 45.6 to 53.7) of those who developed infectious disease undulated between disease states. We identified heterogeneous pathways across disease states after Mtb infection, highlighting the need for clearly defined disease thresholds to inform more effective prevention and treatment efforts to end TB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Treatment for radiographically active, sputum culture-negative pulmonary tuberculosis: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Gray, Adam Thorburn, Macpherson, Liana, Carlin, Ffion, Sossen, Bianca, Richards, Alexandra S., Kik, Sandra V., Houben, Rein M. G. J., MacPherson, Peter, Quartagno, Matteo, Rogozińska, Ewelina, and Esmail, Hanif
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TUBERCULOSIS ,SPUTUM ,RANDOM effects model ,OLANZAPINE ,PROGRESSION-free survival - Abstract
Background: People with radiographic evidence for pulmonary tuberculosis (TB), but negative sputum cultures, have increased risk of developing culture-positive TB. Recent expansion of X-ray screening is leading to increased identification of this group. We set out to synthesise the evidence for treatment to prevent progression to culture-positive disease. Methods: We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis. We searched for prospective trials evaluating the efficacy of TB regimens against placebo, observation, or alternative regimens, for the treatment of adults and children with radiographic evidence of TB but culture-negative respiratory samples. Databases were searched up to 18 Oct 2022. Study quality was assessed using ROB 2·0 and ROBINS-I. The primary outcome was progression to culture-positive TB. Meta-analysis with a random effects model was conducted to estimate pooled efficacy. This study was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42021248486). Findings: We included 13 trials (32,568 individuals) conducted between 1955 and 2018. Radiographic and bacteriological criteria for inclusion varied. 19·1% to 57·9% of participants with active x-ray changes and no treatment progressed to culture-positive disease. Progression was reduced with any treatment (6 studies, risk ratio [RR] 0·27, 95%CI 0·13–0·56), although multi-drug TB treatment (RR 0·11, 95%CI 0·05–0·23) was significantly more effective than isoniazid treatment (RR 0·63, 95%CI 0·35–1·13) (p = 0·0002). Interpretation: Multi-drug regimens were associated with significantly reduced risk of progression to TB disease for individuals with radiographically apparent, but culture-negative TB. However, most studies were old, conducted prior to the HIV epidemic and with outdated regimens. New clinical trials are required to identify the optimal treatment approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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25. Recurrence due to Relapse or Reinfection With Mycobacterium tuberculosis: A Whole-Genome Sequencing Approach in a Large, Population-Based Cohort With a High HIV Infection Prevalence and Active Follow-up
- Author
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Guerra-Assunção, José Afonso, Houben, Rein M. G. J., Crampin, Amelia C., Mzembe, Themba, Mallard, Kim, Coll, Francesc, Khan, Palwasha, Banda, Louis, Chiwaya, Arthur, Pereira, Rui P. A., McNerney, Ruth, Harris, David, Parkhill, Julian, Clark, Taane G., and Glynn, Judith R.
- Published
- 2015
26. The effect of diabetes and undernutrition trends on reaching 2035 global tuberculosis targets
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Odone, Anna, Houben, Rein M G J, White, Richard G, and Lönnroth, Knut
- Published
- 2014
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27. Ability of preventive therapy to cure latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in HIV-infected individuals in high-burden settings
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Houben, Rein M. G. J., Sumner, Tom, Grant, Alison D., and White, Richard G.
- Published
- 2014
28. Use of a Sustainable Livelihood Framework–Based Measure to Estimate Socioeconomic Impact of Tuberculosis on Households.
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Timire, Collins, Pedrazzoli, Debora, Boccia, Delia, Houben, Rein M G J, Ferrand, Rashida A, Bond, Virginia, and Kranzer, Katharina
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TUBERCULOSIS prevention ,WELL-being ,STRATEGIC planning ,MEDICAL care costs ,FAMILIES ,SOCIOECONOMIC status ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,HOLISTIC medicine ,TUBERCULOSIS ,SOCIAL classes ,POVERTY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) disproportionally affects impoverished members of society. The adverse socioeconomic impact of TB on households is mostly measured using money-centric approaches, which have been criticized as one-dimensional and risk either overestimating or underestimating the true socioeconomic impacts of TB. We propose the use of the sustainable livelihood framework, which includes 5 household capital assets (human, financial, physical, natural, and social) and conceptualizes that households employ accumulative strategies in times of plenty and coping (survival) strategies in response to shocks such as TB. The proposed measure ascertains to what extent the 5 capital assets are available to households affected by TB as well as the coping costs (reversible and nonreversible) that are incurred by households at different time points (intensive, continuation, and post–TB treatment phase). We assert that our approach is holistic and multidimensional and draws attention to multisectoral responses to mitigate the socioeconomic impact of TB on households. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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29. Identifying mixed Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections from whole genome sequence data
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Sobkowiak, Benjamin, Glynn, Judith R., Houben, Rein M. G. J., Mallard, Kim, Phelan, Jody E., Guerra-Assunção, José Afonso, Banda, Louis, Mzembe, Themba, Viveiros, Miguel, McNerney, Ruth, Parkhill, Julian, Crampin, Amelia C., and Clark, Taane G.
- Published
- 2018
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30. Investigating the impact of TB case-detection strategies and the consequences of false positive diagnosis through mathematical modelling
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Lalli, Marek, Hamilton, Matthew, Pretorius, Carel, Pedrazzoli, Debora, White, Richard G., and Houben, Rein M. G. J.
- Published
- 2018
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31. The natural history of untreated pulmonary tuberculosis in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Sossen, Bianca, Richards, Alexandra S, Heinsohn, Torben, Frascella, Beatrice, Balzarini, Federica, Oradini-Alacreu, Aurea, Odone, Anna, Rogozinska, Ewelina, Häcker, Brit, Cobelens, Frank, Kranzer, Katharina, Houben, Rein M G J, and Esmail, Hanif
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TUBERCULOSIS ,NATURAL history ,GLOBAL burden of disease - Abstract
Stages of tuberculosis disease can be delineated by radiology, microbiology, and symptoms, but transitions between these stages remain unclear. In a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies of individuals with untreated tuberculosis who underwent follow-up (34 cohorts from 24 studies, with a combined sample of 139 063), we aimed to quantify progression and regression across the tuberculosis disease spectrum by extracting summary estimates to align with disease transitions in a conceptual framework of the natural history of tuberculosis. Progression from microbiologically negative to positive disease (based on smear or culture tests) in participants with baseline radiographic evidence of tuberculosis occurred at an annualised rate of 10% (95% CI 6·2–13·3) in those with chest x-rays suggestive of active tuberculosis, and at a rate of 1% (0·3–1·8) in those with chest x-ray changes suggestive of inactive tuberculosis. Reversion from microbiologically positive to undetectable disease in prospective cohorts occurred at an annualised rate of 12% (6·8–18·0). A better understanding of the natural history of pulmonary tuberculosis, including the risk of progression in relation to radiological findings, could improve estimates of the global disease burden and inform the development of clinical guidelines and policies for treatment and prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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32. Contribution of remote M.tuberculosis infection to tuberculosis disease: A 30-year population study.
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Glynn, Judith R., Khan, Palwasha, Mzembe, Themba, Sichali, Lifted, Fine, Paul E. M., Crampin, Amelia C., and Houben, Rein M. G. J.
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WHOLE genome sequencing ,TUBERCULOSIS ,SKIN tests ,INFECTION ,TUBERCULIN test - Abstract
Background: The importance of remote infection with M.tuberculosis as a cause of tuberculosis disease (TB) is unclear, with limited evidence of impact on TB rates beyond 10 years. Our objective was to assess rates of tuberculosis over 30 years by M.tuberculosis infection status at baseline in Karonga District, Northern Malawi. Materials and methods: Population-based surveys of tuberculin skin testing (TST) from the 1980s were linked with follow-up and TB surveillance in Karonga district. We compared rates of microbiologically-confirmed TB by baseline TST induration <5mm (no evidence of M.tuberculosis infection) and those with baseline TST >17mm (evidence of M.tuberculosis infection), using hazard ratios by time since baseline and attributable risk percent. The attributable risk percent was calculated to estimate the proportion of TB in those infected that can be attributed to that prior infection. We analysed whole genome sequences of M.tuberculosis strains to identify recent transmission. Results: Over 412,959 person-years, 208 incident TB episodes were recorded. Compared to the small induration group, rates of TB were much higher in the first two years in the large induration group, and remained higher to 20 years: age, sex and area-adjusted hazard ratios (HR) 2–9 years post-TST 4.27 (95%CI 2.56–7.11); 10–19 years after TST 2.15 (1.10–4.21); ≥20 years post-TST 1.88 (0.76–4.65). The attributable risk percent of remote infection was 76.6% (60.9–85.9) 2–9 years post-TST, and 53.5% (9.1–76.2) 10–19 years post-TST. Individuals with large TST indurations had higher rates of unique-strain TB (HR adjusted for age, sex and area = HR 6.56 (95% CI 1.96–22.99)), suggesting disease following remote infection, but not of linked-strain TB (recent transmission). Conclusions: M.tuberculosis infection can increase the risk of TB far beyond 10 years, accounting for a substantial proportion of TB occurring among those remotely infected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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33. Self-clearance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection: implications for lifetime risk and population at-risk of tuberculosis disease.
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Emery, Jon C., Richards, Alexandra S., Dale, Katie D., McQuaid, C. Finn, White, Richard G., Denholm, Justin T., and Houben, Rein M. G. J.
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TUBERCULOSIS ,MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,MYCOBACTERIAL diseases ,VACCINE development - Abstract
Background: it is widely assumed that individuals with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection remain at lifelong risk of tuberculosis (TB) disease. However, there is substantial evidence that self-clearance of Mtb infection can occur. We infer a curve of self-clearance by time since infection and explore its implications for TB epidemiology. Methods and findings: data for self-clearance were inferred using post-mortem and tuberculin-skin-test reversion studies. A cohort model allowing for self-clearance was fitted in a Bayesian framework before estimating the lifetime risk of TB disease and the population infected with Mtb in India, China and Japan in 2019. We estimated that 24.4% (17.8–32.6%, 95% uncertainty interval (UI)) of individuals self-clear within 10 years of infection, and 73.1% (64.6–81.7%) over a lifetime. The lifetime risk of TB disease was 17.0% (10.9–22.5%), compared to 12.6% (10.1–15.0%) assuming lifelong infection. The population at risk of TB disease in India, China and Japan was 35–80% (95% UI) smaller in the self-clearance scenario. Conclusions: the population with a viable Mtb infection may be markedly smaller than generally assumed, with such individuals at greater risk of TB disease. The ability to identify these individuals could dramatically improve the targeting of preventive programmes and inform TB vaccine development, bringing TB elimination within reach of feasibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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34. Tuberculosis and nutrition: what gets measured gets managed.
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McQuaid, C Finn, Sinha, Pranay, Bhargava, Madhavi, Weerasuriya, Chathika, Houben, Rein M G J, and Bhargava, Anurag
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TUBERCULOSIS ,NUTRITION ,MEASUREMENT - Published
- 2023
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35. A systematic review and meta-analysis of molecular epidemiological studies of tuberculosis: development of a new tool to aid interpretation
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Houben, Rein M. G. J. and Glynn, Judith R.
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- 2009
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36. The Global Burden of Latent Tuberculosis Infection: A Re-estimation Using Mathematical Modelling
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Houben, Rein M. G. J. and Dodd, Peter J.
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Mathematical models -- Usage -- Research ,Epidemics -- Models -- Research -- United Kingdom ,Tuberculosis -- Usage -- Health aspects -- Surveys -- Risk factors -- Distribution -- Research ,Company distribution practices ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Background The existing estimate of the global burden of latent TB infection (LTBI) as 'one-third' of the world population is nearly 20 y old. Given the importance of controlling LTBI as part of the End TB Strategy for eliminating TB by 2050, changes in demography and scientific understanding, and progress in TB control, it is important to re-assess the global burden of LTBI. Methods and Findings We constructed trends in annual risk in infection (ARI) for countries between 1934 and 2014 using a combination of direct estimates of ARI from LTBI surveys (131 surveys from 1950 to 2011) and indirect estimates of ARI calculated from World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates of smear positive TB prevalence from 1990 to 2014. Gaussian process regression was used to generate ARIs for country-years without data and to represent uncertainty. Estimated ARI time-series were applied to the demography in each country to calculate the number and proportions of individuals infected, recently infected (infected within 2 y), and recently infected with isoniazid (INH)-resistant strains. Resulting estimates were aggregated by WHO region. We estimated the contribution of existing infections to TB incidence in 2035 and 2050. In 2014, the global burden of LTBI was 23.0% (95% uncertainty interval [UI]: 20.4%-26.4%), amounting to approximately 1.7 billion people. WHO South-East Asia, Western-Pacific, and Africa regions had the highest prevalence and accounted for around 80% of those with LTBI. Prevalence of recent infection was 0.8% (95% UI: 0.7%-0.9%) of the global population, amounting to 55.5 (95% UI: 48.2-63.8) million individuals currently at high risk of TB disease, of which 10.9% (95% UI:10.2%-11.8%) was isoniazid-resistant. Current LTBI alone, assuming no additional infections from 2015 onwards, would be expected to generate TB incidences in the region of 16.5 per 100,000 per year in 2035 and 8.3 per 100,000 per year in 2050. Limitations included the quantity and methodological heterogeneity of direct ARI data, and limited evidence to inform on potential clearance of LTBI. Conclusions We estimate that approximately 1.7 billion individuals were latently infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) globally in 2014, just under a quarter of the global population. Investment in new tools to improve diagnosis and treatment of those with LTBI at risk of progressing to disease is urgently needed to address this latent reservoir if the 2050 target of eliminating TB is to be reached., Author(s): Rein M. G. J. Houben 1,2,*, Peter J. Dodd 3 Introduction Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M .tb ) is the precursor to TB disease, which is responsible for 1.5 [...]
- Published
- 2016
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37. Subclinical Tuberculosis Disease—A Review and Analysis of Prevalence Surveys to Inform Definitions, Burden, Associations, and Screening Methodology.
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Frascella, Beatrice, Richards, Alexandra S, Sossen, Bianca, Emery, Jon C, Odone, Anna, Law, Irwin, Onozaki, Ikushi, Esmail, Hanif, and Houben, Rein M G J
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TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,CHEST X rays ,MEDICAL screening ,SURVEYS - Abstract
While it is known that a substantial proportion of individuals with tuberculosis disease (TB) present subclinically, usually defined as bacteriologically-confirmed but negative on symptom screening, considerable knowledge gaps remain. Our aim was to review data from TB prevalence population surveys and generate a consistent definition and framework for subclinical TB, enabling us to estimate the proportion of TB that is subclinical, explore associations with overall burden and program indicators, and evaluate the performance of screening strategies. We extracted data from all publicly available prevalence surveys conducted since 1990. Between 36.1% and 79.7% (median, 50.4%) of prevalent bacteriologically confirmed TB was subclinical. No association was found between prevalence of subclinical and all bacteriologically confirmed TB, patient diagnostic rate, or country-level HIV prevalence (P values,.32,.4, and.34, respectively). Chest Xray detected 89% (range, 73%–98%) of bacteriologically confirmed TB, highlighting the potential of optimizing current TB case-finding policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
38. Schwalb and Houben Respond to "The Winding Road to ARTI".
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Schwalb, Alvaro and Houben, Rein M G J
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- *
TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis , *TUBERCULOSIS risk factors , *INTERFERON gamma release tests , *RESPIRATORY infections , *RISK assessment , *MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
The authors responds to a commentary on their article about identifying the annual rate of tuberculosis infection, particularly on where the true annual risk of infection (ARI) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis lies. Cited are their consideration of the reversion of the observed process of waning immunoreactivity, rather than an underlying mechanism such as self-cure, and their agreement on the need for better and well-characterized data on the rate of reversion to feed into their model.
- Published
- 2023
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39. Tuberculosis prevalence: beyond the tip of the iceberg.
- Author
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Houben, Rein M G J, Esmail, Hanif, Cobelens, Frank, Williams, Caroline M L, and Coussens, Anna K
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TUBERCULOSIS - Published
- 2022
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40. Self-clearance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection: implications for lifetime risk and population at-risk of tuberculosis disease.
- Author
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Emery, Jon C., Richards, Alexandra S., Dale, Katie D., McQuaid, C. Finn, White, Richard G., Denholm, Justin T., and Houben, Rein M. G. J.
- Subjects
MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis ,MYCOBACTERIAL diseases ,TUBERCULOSIS ,VACCINE development ,DISEASES ,EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: it is widely assumed that individuals with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection remain at lifelong risk of tuberculosis (TB) disease. However, there is substantial evidence that self-clearance of Mtb infection can occur. We infer a curve of self-clearance by time since infection and explore its implications for TB epidemiology. Methods and findings: data for self-clearance were inferred using post-mortem and tuberculin-skin-test reversion studies. A cohort model allowing for self-clearance was fitted in a Bayesian framework before estimating the lifetime risk of TB disease and the population infected with Mtb in India, China and Japan in 2019. We estimated that 24.4% (17.8–32.6%, 95% uncertainty interval (UI)) of individuals self-clear within 10 years of infection, and 73.1% (64.6–81.7%) over a lifetime. The lifetime risk of TB disease was 17.0% (10.9–22.5%), compared to 12.6% (10.1–15.0%) assuming lifelong infection. The population at risk of TB disease in India, China and Japan was 35–80% (95% UI) smaller in the self-clearance scenario. Conclusions: the population with a viable Mtb infection may be markedly smaller than generally assumed, with such individuals at greater risk of TB disease. The ability to identify these individuals could dramatically improve the targeting of preventive programmes and inform TB vaccine development, bringing TB elimination within reach of feasibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The contribution of asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections to transmission on the Diamond Princess cruise ship.
- Author
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Emery, Jon C., Russell, Timothy W., Yang Liu, Hellewell, Joel, Pearson, Carl A. B., Knight, Gwenan M., Eggo, Rosalind M., Kucharski, Adam J., Funk, Sebastian, Flasche, Stefan, and Houben, Rein M. G. J.
- Published
- 2020
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42. Estimating Long-term Tuberculosis Reactivation Rates in Australian Migrants.
- Author
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Dale, Katie D, Trauer, James M, Dodd, Peter J, Houben, Rein M G J, and Denholm, Justin T
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TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,IMMIGRANTS ,AGE distribution ,DISEASE relapse ,DISEASE prevalence ,DISEASE progression ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background The risk of progression to tuberculosis (TB) disease is greatest soon after infection, yet disease may occur many years or decades later. However, rates of TB reactivation long after infection remain poorly quantified. Australia has a low incidence of TB and most cases occur among migrants. We explored how TB rates in Australian migrants varied with time from migration, age, and gender. Methods We combined TB notifications in census years 2006, 2011, and 2016 with time- and country-specific estimates of latent TB prevalences in migrant cohorts to quantify postmigration reactivation rates. Results During the census years, 3246 TB cases occurred among an estimated 2 084 000 migrants with latent TB. There were consistent trends in postmigration reactivation rates, which appeared to be dependent on both time from migration and age. Rates were lower in cohorts with increasing time, until at least 20 years from migration, and on this background there also appeared to be increasing rates during youth (15–24 years of age) and in those aged 70 years and above. Within 5 years of migration, annual reactivation rates were approximately 400 per 100 000 (uncertainty interval [UI] 320–480), dropping to 170 (UI 130–220) from 5 to 10 years and 110 (UI 70–160) from 10 to 20 years, then sustaining at 60–70 per 100 000 up to 60 years from migration. Rates varied depending on age at migration. Conclusions Postmigration reactivation rates appeared to show dependency on both time from migration and age. This approach to quantifying reactivation risks will enable evaluations of the potential impacts of TB control and elimination strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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43. Quantifying the impact of physical distance measures on the transmission of COVID-19 in the UK.
- Author
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Jarvis, Christopher I., Van Zandvoort, Kevin, Gimma, Amy, Prem, Kiesha, CMMID COVID-19 working group, Auzenbergs, Megan, O'Reilly, Kathleen, Medley, Graham, Emery, Jon C., Houben, Rein M. G. J., Davies, Nicholas, Nightingale, Emily S., Flasche, Stefan, Jombart, Thibaut, Hellewell, Joel, Abbott, Sam, Munday, James D., Bosse, Nikos I., Funk, Sebastian, and Sun, Fiona
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,SOCIAL contact ,DISTANCES ,PHYSICAL contact ,PREVENTION of epidemics ,VIRAL pneumonia ,HEALTH policy ,MATHEMATICAL models ,DISEASE incidence ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,SOCIAL isolation ,BASIC reproduction number ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,THEORY ,RESEARCH funding ,CONTACT tracing ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission - Abstract
Background: To mitigate and slow the spread of COVID-19, many countries have adopted unprecedented physical distancing policies, including the UK. We evaluate whether these measures might be sufficient to control the epidemic by estimating their impact on the reproduction number (R0, the average number of secondary cases generated per case).Methods: We asked a representative sample of UK adults about their contact patterns on the previous day. The questionnaire was conducted online via email recruitment and documents the age and location of contacts and a measure of their intimacy (whether physical contact was made or not). In addition, we asked about adherence to different physical distancing measures. The first surveys were sent on Tuesday, 24 March, 1 day after a "lockdown" was implemented across the UK. We compared measured contact patterns during the "lockdown" to patterns of social contact made during a non-epidemic period. By comparing these, we estimated the change in reproduction number as a consequence of the physical distancing measures imposed. We used a meta-analysis of published estimates to inform our estimates of the reproduction number before interventions were put in place.Results: We found a 74% reduction in the average daily number of contacts observed per participant (from 10.8 to 2.8). This would be sufficient to reduce R0 from 2.6 prior to lockdown to 0.62 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.37-0.89) after the lockdown, based on all types of contact and 0.37 (95% CI = 0.22-0.53) for physical (skin to skin) contacts only.Conclusions: The physical distancing measures adopted by the UK public have substantially reduced contact levels and will likely lead to a substantial impact and a decline in cases in the coming weeks. However, this projected decline in incidence will not occur immediately as there are significant delays between infection, the onset of symptomatic disease, and hospitalisation, as well as further delays to these events being reported. Tracking behavioural change can give a more rapid assessment of the impact of physical distancing measures than routine epidemiological surveillance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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44. Importance of Heterogeneity to the Epidemiology of Tuberculosis.
- Author
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Trauer, James M, Dodd, Peter J, Gomes, M Gabriela M, Gomez, Gabriela B, Houben, Rein M G J, McBryde, Emma S, Melsew, Yayehirad A, Menzies, Nicolas A, Arinaminpathy, Nimalan, Shrestha, Sourya, and Dowdy, David W
- Subjects
TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,TUBERCULOSIS prevention ,TUBERCULOSIS risk factors ,TUBERCULOSIS transmission ,TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,COMORBIDITY ,SYMPTOMS ,DISEASE prevalence ,HEALTH & social status ,DISEASE eradication - Abstract
The article presents a study which described the key drivers of heterogeneity in tuberculosis (TB) burden and the challenges in quantifying this heterogeneity. Topics discussed include factors that contribute to heterogeneity, examples of specific forms of heterogeneity and ways forward, and challenges in quantifying heterogeneity.
- Published
- 2019
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45. Chronic Respiratory Symptoms and Lung Abnormalities Among People With a History of Tuberculosis in Uganda: A National Survey.
- Author
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Kampen, Sanne Christine van, Jones, Rupert, Kisembo, Harriet, Houben, Rein M G J, Wei, Yinghui, Mugabe, Frank R, Rutebemberwa, Elizeus, and Kirenga, Bruce
- Subjects
RESPIRATORY disease risk factors ,TUBERCULOSIS complications ,COUGH -- Risk factors ,AGE distribution ,CHRONIC diseases ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,LUNG diseases ,MUCUS ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,SEX distribution ,SMOKING ,SURVEYS ,X-rays ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,DISEASE prevalence ,ODDS ratio ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background People with pulmonary tuberculosis are at risk of developing chronic respiratory disorders due to residual lung damage. To date, the scope of the problem in high-burden tuberculosis countries is relatively unknown. Methods Chronic respiratory symptoms (cough and phlegm lasting >2 weeks) and radiological lung abnormalities were compared between adults with and without a history of tuberculosis among the general population of Uganda. Multivariable regression models were used to estimate odds ratios (ORs) with adjustment for age, gender, smoking, education, setting, and region. Random effects models accounted for village clustering effect. Results Of 45293 invited people from 70 villages, 41154 (90.9%) participated in the survey. A total of 798 had a history of tuberculosis and, among them, 16% had respiratory symptoms and 41% X-ray abnormalities. Adjusted ORs showed strong evidence for individuals with a history of tuberculosis having increased risk of respiratory symptoms (OR, 4.02; 95% confidence interval [CI], 3.25–4.96) and X-ray abnormalities (OR, 17.52; 95% CI, 14.76–20.79), attributing 6% and 24% of the respective population risks. Conclusions In Uganda, a history of tuberculosis was a strong predictor of respiratory symptoms and lung abnormalities, before older age and smoking. Eliminating tuberculosis disease could reduce the prevalence of chronic respiratory symptoms as much as eliminating smoking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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46. What if They Don't Have Tuberculosis? The Consequences and Trade-offs Involved in False-positive Diagnoses of Tuberculosis.
- Author
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Houben, Rein M G J, Lalli, Marek, Kranzer, Katharina, Menzies, Nick A, Schumacher, Samuel G, and Dowdy, David W
- Subjects
- *
TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis , *TUBERCULOSIS prevention , *ALGORITHMS , *DIAGNOSTIC errors , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL screening , *PUBLIC health surveillance , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *RESIDENTIAL patterns - Abstract
To find the millions of missed tuberculosis (TB) cases, national TB programs are under pressure to expand TB disease screening and to target populations with lower disease prevalence. Together with imperfect performance and application of existing diagnostic tools, including empirical diagnosis, broader screening risks placing individuals without TB on prolonged treatment. These false-positive diagnoses have profound consequences for TB patients and prevention efforts, yet are usually overlooked in policy decision making. In this article we describe the pathways to a false-positive TB diagnosis, including trade-offs involved in the development and application of diagnostic algorithms. We then consider the wide range of potential consequences for individuals, households, health systems, and reliability of surveillance data. Finally, we suggest practical steps that the TB community can take to reduce the frequency and potential harms of false-positive TB diagnosis and to more explicitly assess the trade-offs involved in the screening and diagnostic process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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47. A Bayesian Approach to Understanding Sex Differences in Tuberculosis Disease Burden.
- Author
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Horton, Katherine C, Sumner, Tom, Houben, Rein M G J, Corbett, Elizabeth L, and White, Richard G
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TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases ,MEDICAL screening ,PROBABILITY theory ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,DISEASE incidence ,DISEASE prevalence ,DISEASE duration - Abstract
Globally, men have a higher epidemiologic burden of tuberculosis (incidence, prevalence, mortality) than women do, possibly due to differences in disease incidence, treatment initiation, self-cure, and/or untreated-tuberculosis mortality rates. Using a simple, sex-stratified compartmental model, we employed a Bayesian approach to explore which factors most likely explain men's higher burden. We applied the model to smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis in Vietnam (2006–2007) and Malawi (2013–2014). Posterior estimates were consistent with sex-specific prevalence and notifications in both countries. Results supported higher incidence in men and showed that both sexes faced longer durations of untreated disease than estimated by self-reports. Prior untreated disease durations were revised upward 8- to 24-fold, to 2.2 (95% credible interval: 1.7, 2.9) years for men in Vietnam and 2.8 (1.8, 4.1) years for men in Malawi, approximately a year longer than for women in each country. Results imply that substantial sex differences in tuberculosis burden are almost solely attributable to men's disadvantages in disease incidence and untreated disease duration. The latter, for which self-reports provide a poor proxy, implies inadequate coverage of case-finding strategies. These results highlight an urgent need for better understanding of gender-related barriers faced by men and support the systematic targeting of men for screening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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48. Sex Differences in Tuberculosis Burden and Notifications in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
- Author
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Horton, Katherine C., MacPherson, Peter, Houben, Rein M. G. J., White, Richard G., and Corbett, Elizabeth L.
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GENDER differences (Psychology) ,TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,GENDER specific care ,DIAGNOSTIC services ,MIDDLE-income countries ,LOW-income countries - Abstract
Background: Tuberculosis (TB) case notification rates are usually higher in men than in women, but notification data are insufficient to measure sex differences in disease burden. This review set out to systematically investigate whether sex ratios in case notifications reflect differences in disease prevalence and to identify gaps in access to and/or utilisation of diagnostic services.Methods and Findings: In accordance with the published protocol (CRD42015022163), TB prevalence surveys in nationally representative and sub-national adult populations (age ≥ 15 y) in low- and middle-income countries published between 1 January 1993 and 15 March 2016 were identified through searches of PubMed, Embase, Global Health, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews; review of abstracts; and correspondence with the World Health Organization. Random-effects meta-analyses examined male-to-female (M:F) ratios in TB prevalence and prevalence-to-notification (P:N) ratios for smear-positive TB. Meta-regression was done to identify factors associated with higher M:F ratios in prevalence and higher P:N ratios. Eighty-three publications describing 88 surveys with over 3.1 million participants in 28 countries were identified (36 surveys in Africa, three in the Americas, four in the Eastern Mediterranean, 28 in South-East Asia and 17 in the Western Pacific). Fifty-six surveys reported in 53 publications were included in quantitative analyses. Overall random-effects weighted M:F prevalence ratios were 2.21 (95% CI 1.92-2.54; 56 surveys) for bacteriologically positive TB and 2.51 (95% CI 2.07-3.04; 40 surveys) for smear-positive TB. M:F prevalence ratios were highest in South-East Asia and in surveys that did not require self-report of signs/symptoms in initial screening procedures. The summary random-effects weighted M:F ratio for P:N ratios was 1.55 (95% CI 1.25-1.91; 34 surveys). We intended to stratify the analyses by age, HIV status, and rural or urban setting; however, few studies reported such data.Conclusions: TB prevalence is significantly higher among men than women in low- and middle-income countries, with strong evidence that men are disadvantaged in seeking and/or accessing TB care in many settings. Global strategies and national TB programmes should recognise men as an underserved high-risk group and improve men's access to diagnostic and screening services to reduce the overall burden of TB more effectively and ensure gender equity in TB care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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49. Post-treatment effect of isoniazid preventive therapy on tuberculosis incidence in HIV-infected individuals on antiretroviral therapy.
- Author
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Sumner, Tom, Houben, Rein M. G. J., Rangaka, Molebogeng X., Maartens, Gary, Boulle, Andrew, Wilkinson, Robert J., and White, Richard G.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Whole Genome Sequencing Shows a Low Proportion of Tuberculosis Disease Is Attributable to Known Close Contacts in Rural Malawi.
- Author
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Glynn, Judith R., Guerra-Assunção, José Afonso, Houben, Rein M. G. J., Sichali, Lifted, Mzembe, Themba, Mwaungulu, Lorrain K., Mwaungulu, J. Nimrod, McNerney, Ruth, Khan, Palwasha, Parkhill, Julian, Crampin, Amelia C., and Clark, Taane G.
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TUBERCULOSIS transmission ,TUBERCULOSIS patients ,SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,POPULATION health - Abstract
Background: The proportion of tuberculosis attributable to transmission from close contacts is not well known. Comparison of the genome of strains from index patients and prior contacts allows transmission to be confirmed or excluded. Methods: In Karonga District, Malawi, all tuberculosis patients are asked about prior contact with others with tuberculosis. All available strains from culture-positive patients were sequenced. Up to 10 single nucleotide polymorphisms between index patients and their prior contacts were allowed for confirmation, and ≥ 100 for exclusion. The population attributable fraction was estimated from the proportion of confirmed transmissions and the proportion of patients with contacts. Results: From 1997–2010 there were 1907 new culture-confirmed tuberculosis patients, of whom 32% reported at least one family contact and an additional 11% had at least one other contact; 60% of contacts had smear-positive disease. Among case-contact pairs with sequences available, transmission was confirmed from 38% (62/163) smear-positive prior contacts and 0/17 smear-negative prior contacts. Confirmed transmission was more common in those related to the prior contact (42.4%, 56/132) than in non-relatives (19.4%, 6/31, p = 0.02), and in those with more intense contact, to younger index cases, and in more recent years. The proportion of tuberculosis attributable to known contacts was estimated to be 9.4% overall. Conclusions: In this population known contacts only explained a small proportion of tuberculosis cases. Even those with a prior family contact with smear positive tuberculosis were more likely to have acquired their infection elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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