Auguste Peter, Tsertsvadze Alexander, Pink Joshua, Court Rachel, Seedat Farah, Gurung Tara, Freeman Karoline, Taylor-Phillips Sian, Walker Clare, Madan Jason, Kandala Ngianga-Bakwin, Clarke Aileen, Sutcliffe Paul
Warwick Evidence, Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Evidence in Communicable Disease Epidemiology and Control, Division of Health Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2016 May;20(38):1-678. doi: 10.3310/hta20380.
Tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) [(Zopf 1883) Lehmann and Neumann 1896], is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Nearly one-third of the world's population is infected with MTB; TB has an annual incidence of 9 million new cases and each year causes 2 million deaths worldwide.
To investigate the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of screening tests [interferon-gamma release assays (IGRAs) and tuberculin skin tests (TSTs)] in latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) diagnosis to support National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline development for three population groups: children, immunocompromised people and those who have recently arrived in the UK from high-incidence countries. All of these groups are at higher risk of progression from LTBI to active TB.
Electronic databases including MEDLINE, EMBASE, The Cochrane Library and Current Controlled Trials were searched from December 2009 up to December 2014.
English-language studies evaluating the comparative effectiveness of commercially available tests used for identifying LTBI in children, immunocompromised people and recent arrivals to the UK were eligible. Interventions were IGRAs [QuantiFERON(®)-TB Gold (QFT-G), QuantiFERON(®)-TB Gold-In-Tube (QFT-GIT) (Cellestis/Qiagen, Carnegie, VA, Australia) and T-SPOT.TB (Oxford Immunotec, Abingdon, UK)]. The comparator was TST 5 mm or 10 mm alone or with an IGRA. Two independent reviewers screened all identified records and undertook a quality assessment and data synthesis. A de novo model, structured in two stages, was developed to compare the cost-effectiveness of diagnostic strategies.
In total, 6687 records were screened, of which 53 unique studies were included (a further 37 studies were identified from a previous NICE guideline). The majority of the included studies compared the strength of association for the QFT-GIT/G IGRA with the TST (5 mm or 10 mm) in relation to the incidence of active TB or previous TB exposure. Ten studies reported evidence on decision-analytic models to determine the cost-effectiveness of IGRAs compared with the TST for LTBI diagnosis. In children, TST (≥ 5 mm) negative followed by QFT-GIT was the most cost-effective strategy, with an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of £18,900 per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained. In immunocompromised people, QFT-GIT negative followed by the TST (≥ 5 mm) was the most cost-effective strategy, with an ICER of approximately £18,700 per QALY gained. In those recently arrived from high TB incidence countries, the TST (≥ 5 mm) alone was less costly and more effective than TST (≥ 5 mm) positive followed by QFT-GIT or T-SPOT.TB or QFT-GIT alone.
The limitations and scarcity of the evidence, variation in the exposure-based definitions of LTBI and heterogeneity in IGRA performance relative to TST limit the applicability of the review findings.
Given the current evidence, TST (≥ 5 mm) negative followed by QFT-GIT for children, QFT-GIT negative followed by TST (≥ 5 mm) for the immunocompromised population and TST (≥ 5 mm) for recent arrivals were the most cost-effective strategies for diagnosing LTBI that progresses to active TB. These results should be interpreted with caution given the limitations identified. The evidence available is limited and more high-quality research in this area is needed including studies on the inconsistent performance of tests in high-compared with low-incidence TB settings; the prospective assessment of progression to active TB for those at high risk; the relative benefits of two-compared with one-step testing with different tests; and improved classification of people at high and low risk for LTBI.
This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42014009033.
The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme.
由结核分枝杆菌(MTB)[(措普夫,1883年)莱曼和诺伊曼,1896年]引起的结核病是发病和死亡的主要原因。全球近三分之一的人口感染了MTB;结核病的年发病率为900万新病例,全球每年导致200万人死亡。
调查筛查试验[干扰素-γ释放试验(IGRAs)和结核菌素皮肤试验(TSTs)]在潜伏性结核感染(LTBI)诊断中的临床有效性和成本效益,以支持英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所(NICE)针对三类人群制定指南:儿童、免疫功能低下者以及最近从高发病率国家抵达英国的人群。所有这些人群从LTBI进展为活动性结核病的风险更高。
检索了2009年12月至2014年12月期间的电子数据库,包括MEDLINE、EMBASE、考克兰图书馆和当前受控试验库。
评估用于识别儿童、免疫功能低下者和近期抵达英国者中LTBI的商用检测方法比较有效性的英文研究符合要求。干预措施为IGRAs[QuantiFERON(®)-TB Gold(QFT-G)、QuantiFERON(®)-TB Gold-In-Tube(QFT-GIT)(澳大利亚卡内基市Cellestis/Qiagen公司)和T-SPOT.TB(英国阿宾登市牛津免疫技术公司)]。对照为单独的TST 5mm或10mm或与IGRA联合使用。两名独立的评审员筛选了所有识别出的记录,并进行了质量评估和数据综合。开发了一个分两个阶段构建的全新模型,以比较诊断策略的成本效益。
共筛选了6687条记录,其中纳入了53项独特的研究(从之前的NICE指南中又识别出37项研究)。大多数纳入研究比较了QFT-GIT/G IGRA与TST(5mm或10mm)在活动性结核病发病率或既往结核暴露方面的关联强度。十项研究报告了关于决策分析模型的证据,以确定IGRAs与TST在LTBI诊断方面的成本效益。在儿童中,TST(≥5mm)阴性后进行QFT-GIT是最具成本效益的策略,每获得一个质量调整生命年(QALY)的增量成本效益比(ICER)为18,900英镑。在免疫功能低下者中,QFT-GIT阴性后进行TST(≥5mm)是最具成本效益的策略,每QALY的ICER约为18,700英镑。在最近从高结核病发病率国家抵达的人群中,单独的TST(≥5mm)比TST(≥5mm)阳性后进行QFT-GIT或T-SPOT.TB或单独进行QFT-GIT成本更低且更有效。
证据的局限性和稀缺性、基于暴露的LTBI定义的差异以及IGRA相对于TST性能的异质性限制了综述结果的适用性。
鉴于目前的证据,儿童中TST(≥5mm)阴性后进行QFT-GIT、免疫功能低下人群中QFT-GIT阴性后进行TST(≥5mm)以及近期抵达者中TST(≥5mm)是诊断进展为活动性结核病的LTBI最具成本效益的策略。鉴于已确定的局限性,应谨慎解释这些结果。现有证据有限,该领域需要更多高质量的研究,包括在高发病率与低发病率结核病环境中检测性能不一致的研究;对高危人群进展为活动性结核病的前瞻性评估;两种检测与一步检测不同检测方法的相对益处;以及改进LTBI高危和低危人群的分类。
本研究注册为PROSPERO CRD42014009033。
英国国家卫生研究院卫生技术评估项目。