Section of Infectious Disease, Department of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2019 Mar;19(3):e89-e95. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(18)30443-2. Epub 2018 Dec 13.
As the leading infectious cause of death worldwide and the primary proximal cause of death in individuals living with HIV, tuberculosis remains a global concern. Existing tuberculosis control strategies that rely on passive case-finding appear insufficient to achieve targets for reductions in tuberculosis incidence and mortality. Active case-finding strategies aim to detect infectious individuals earlier in their infectious period to reduce onward transmission and improve treatment outcomes. Empirical studies of active case-finding have produced mixed results and determining how to direct active screening to those most at risk remains a topic of intense research. Our systematic review of literature evaluating the effects of geographically targeted tuberculosis screening interventions found three studies in low tuberculosis incidence settings, but none conducted in high tuberculosis incidence countries. We discuss open questions related to the use of spatially targeted approaches for active screening in countries where tuberculosis incidence is highest.
作为全球主要的传染病死因和 HIV 感染者的主要近端死因,结核病仍然是一个全球性的关注问题。现有的结核病控制策略依赖于被动发现病例,似乎不足以实现降低结核病发病率和死亡率的目标。主动发现病例策略旨在更早地发现传染性个体,以减少传播并改善治疗效果。主动发现病例的实证研究结果喜忧参半,如何将主动筛查指向最有风险的人群仍然是一个研究热点。我们对评估地理目标结核病筛查干预效果的文献进行了系统回顾,发现了三个在低结核病发病率环境中的研究,但没有一个在高结核病发病率国家进行。我们讨论了在结核病发病率最高的国家中使用空间靶向方法进行主动筛查的相关问题。