Department of Medicine (Khan, Gardam), Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Toronto; Centre for Research on Inner City Health (Khan, Miniota, Creatore, Chan, Hu, Wang), Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ont.; Public Health and Preventive Medicine Residency Program (Hirji), Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.; Infection Prevention and Control (Gardam), University Health Network; Faculty of Medicine (Rawal), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.; Faculty of Medicine (Ellis), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Toronto Public Health and Dalla Lana School of Public Health (Rea), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.
CMAJ. 2015 Nov 3;187(16):E473-E481. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.150011. Epub 2015 Sep 28.
All Canadian immigrants undergo screening for tuberculosis (TB) before immigration, and selected immigrants must undergo postimmigration surveillance for the disease. We sought to quantify the domestic health impact of screening for TB in all new immigrants and to identify mechanisms to enhance effectiveness and efficiency of this screening.
We linked preimmigration medical examination records from 944,375 immigrants who settled in Ontario between 2002 and 2011 to active TB reporting data in Ontario between 2002 and 2011. Using a retrospective cohort study design, we measured birth country-specific rates of active TB detected through preimmigration screening and postimmigration surveillance. We then quantified the proportion of active TB cases among residents of Ontario born abroad that were detected through postimmigration surveillance. Using Cox regression, we identified independent predictors of active TB postimmigration.
Immigrants from 6 countries accounted for 87.3% of active TB cases detected through preimmigration screening, and 10 countries accounted for 80.4% of cases detected through postimmigration surveillance. Immigrants from countries with a TB (all-sites) incidence rate of less than 30 cases per 100 000 persons resulted in pre- and postimmigration detection of 2.4 and 0.9 cases per 100 000 immigrants, respectively. Postimmigration surveillance detected 2.6% of active TB cases in Ontario residents born abroad, and TB was detected a median of 18 days earlier in those undergoing surveillance than in those who were not referred to surveillance or who did not comply. Predictors of active TB postimmigration included radiographic markers of old TB, birth country, immigration category, location of application for residency, immune status and age.
Universal screening for TB in new immigrants has a modest impact on the domestic burden of active TB and is highly inefficient. Focusing preimmigration screening in countries with high incidence rates and revising criteria for postimmigration surveillance could increase the effectiveness and efficiency of screening.
所有加拿大移民在移民前都要接受结核病(TB)筛查,部分移民在移民后还必须接受针对该病的监测。我们旨在量化所有新移民结核病筛查对国内卫生的影响,并确定增强这种筛查效果和效率的机制。
我们将 2002 年至 2011 年间在安大略省定居的 944375 名移民的移民前体检记录与 2002 年至 2011 年安大略省的活动性结核病报告数据相链接。采用回顾性队列研究设计,我们测量了通过移民前筛查和移民后监测发现的来自特定国家的出生的移民的活动性结核病的发生率。然后,我们量化了通过移民后监测发现的安大略省出生的外国居民中的活动性结核病病例比例。我们使用 Cox 回归确定了移民后活动性结核病的独立预测因素。
来自 6 个国家的移民占通过移民前筛查发现的活动性结核病病例的 87.3%,10 个国家占通过移民后监测发现的病例的 80.4%。来自结核病(所有部位)发病率低于 30 例/10 万人的国家的移民,分别导致移民前和移民后每 10 万人中有 2.4 例和 0.9 例病例被发现。在安大略省出生的外国居民中,移民后监测发现了 2.6%的活动性结核病病例,与未被转诊接受监测或不遵守监测要求的人相比,接受监测的人结核病的发现时间中位数提前了 18 天。移民后的活动性结核病的预测因素包括陈旧性结核病的放射学标志物、出生国、移民类别、居住申请地点、免疫状态和年龄。
对新移民进行结核病普查对国内活动性结核病负担的影响不大,效率也很低。将移民前筛查的重点放在发病率较高的国家,并修改移民后监测的标准,可能会提高筛查的效果和效率。