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Community-Wide Universal HIV Test and Treat Intervention Reduces Tuberculosis Transmission in Rural Uganda: A Cluster-Randomized Trial.

Authors :
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
Balzer, Laura B
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases; 6/15/2024, Vol. 78 Issue 6, p1601-1607, 7p
Publication Year :
2024

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]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10584838
Volume :
78
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177926986
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciad776