Houben Rein M G J, Dodd Peter J
TB Modelling Group, TB Centre, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS Med. 2016 Oct 25;13(10):e1002152. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002152. eCollection 2016 Oct.
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.
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.
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.
将全球潜伏性结核感染(LTBI)负担估计为世界人口“三分之一”的现有数据已有近20年历史。鉴于控制LTBI作为到2050年消除结核病的终结结核病战略的一部分的重要性、人口结构的变化和科学认识的进步以及结核病控制方面的进展,重新评估全球LTBI负担很重要。
我们结合来自LTBI调查(1950年至2011年的131次调查)的年度感染风险(ARI)直接估计值和根据世界卫生组织(WHO)1990年至2014年涂片阳性结核病患病率估计值计算的ARI间接估计值,构建了1934年至2014年各国的ARI趋势。使用高斯过程回归来生成无数据国家年份的ARI,并表示不确定性。将估计的ARI时间序列应用于每个国家的人口结构,以计算感染个体、近期感染(2年内感染)个体以及近期感染耐异烟肼(INH)菌株个体的数量和比例。所得估计值按WHO区域汇总。我们估计了现有感染对2035年和2050年结核病发病率的贡献。2014年,全球LTBI负担为23.0%(95%不确定区间[UI]:20.4% - 26.4%),相当于约17亿人。WHO东南亚、西太平洋和非洲区域的患病率最高,约占LTBI患者的80%。近期感染的患病率为全球人口的0.8%(95% UI:0.7% - 0.9%),相当于目前有5550万(95% UI:4820万 - 6380万)个体处于结核病发病的高风险中,其中10.9%(95% UI:10.2% - 11.8%)对异烟肼耐药。仅当前的LTBI,假设从2015年起无新增感染,预计在2035年该区域每年每10万人中结核病发病率约为16.5例,在2050年每年每10万人中约为8.3例。局限性包括直接ARI数据的数量和方法异质性,以及关于LTBI潜在清除的信息有限。
我们估计2014年全球约有17亿人潜伏感染结核分枝杆菌(M.tb),略低于全球人口的四分之一。如果要实现2050年消除结核病的目标,迫切需要投资开发新工具,以改善对有进展为疾病风险的LTBI患者的诊断和治疗,从而应对这一潜伏感染源。