ZAMBART Project, University Teaching Hospital, Lusaka, Zambia.
PLoS One. 2009 Nov 13;4(11):e7749. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0007749.
The annual risk of tuberculous infection (ARTI) is a key epidemiological indicator of the extent of transmission in a community. Several methods have been suggested to estimate the prevalence of tuberculous infection using tuberculin skin test data. This paper explores the implications of using different methods to estimate prevalence of infection and ARTI. The effect of BCG vaccination on these estimates is also investigated.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Tuberculin surveys among school children in 16 communities in Zambia and 8 in South Africa (SA) were performed in 2005, as part of baseline data collection and for randomisation purposes of the ZAMSTAR study. Infection prevalence and ARTI estimates were calculated using five methods: different cut-offs with or without adjustments for sensitivity, the mirror method, and mixture analysis. A total of 49,835 children were registered for the surveys, of which 25,048 (50%) had skin tests done and 22,563 (90%) of those tested were read. Infection prevalence was higher in the combined SA than Zambian communities. The mirror method resulted in the least difference of 7.8%, whereas that estimated by the cut-off methods varied from 12.2% to 17.3%. The ARTI in the Zambian and SA communities was between 0.8% and 2.8% and 2.5% and 4.2% respectively, depending on the method used. In the SA communities, the ARTI was higher among the younger children. BCG vaccination had little effect on these estimates.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: ARTI estimates are dependent on the calculation method used. All methods agreed that there were substantial differences in infection prevalence across the communities, with higher rates in SA. Although TB notification rates have increased over the past decades, the difference in cumulative exposure between younger and older children is less dramatic and a rise in risk of infection in parallel with the estimated incidence of active tuberculosis cannot be excluded.
结核感染年发病率(ARTI)是衡量社区传播程度的关键流行病学指标。已经提出了几种方法来使用结核菌素皮肤试验数据估计结核感染的流行率。本文探讨了使用不同方法估计感染和 ARTI 流行率的意义。还研究了卡介苗接种对这些估计的影响。
方法/主要发现:2005 年,赞比亚 16 个社区和南非 8 个社区的学童进行了结核菌素调查,这是 ZAMSTAR 研究的基线数据收集和随机分组的一部分。使用五种方法计算了感染流行率和 ARTI 估计值:不同的临界值,包括或不包括对敏感性的调整、镜像法和混合物分析。共有 49835 名儿童注册参加了调查,其中 25048 名(50%)进行了皮肤测试,其中 22563 名(90%)接受了测试。合并的南非社区的感染流行率高于赞比亚社区。镜像法导致的差异最小,为 7.8%,而截止值方法的差异则在 12.2%至 17.3%之间。赞比亚和南非社区的 ARTI 分别在 0.8%至 2.8%和 2.5%至 4.2%之间,具体取决于使用的方法。在南非社区,年龄较小的儿童的 ARTI 更高。卡介苗接种对这些估计值影响不大。
结论/意义:ARTI 估计值取决于所使用的计算方法。所有方法都认为,各社区之间的感染流行率存在显著差异,南非的感染率更高。尽管过去几十年结核病报告率有所增加,但年轻和年长儿童之间的累积暴露差异并不明显,不能排除感染风险与估计的活动性结核病发病率平行上升的可能性。