Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2020 Dec 1;202(11):1567-1575. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202003-0526OC.
Most U.S. residents who develop tuberculosis (TB) were born abroad, and U.S. TB incidence is increasingly driven by infection risks in other countries. To estimate the potential impact of effective global TB control on health and economic outcomes in the United States. We estimated outcomes using linked mathematical models of TB epidemiology in the United States and migrants' birth countries. A base-case scenario extrapolated country-specific TB incidence trends. We compared this with scenarios in which countries achieve 90% TB incidence reductions between 2015 and 2035, as targeted by the World Health Organization's End TB Strategy ("effective global TB control"). We also considered pessimistic scenarios of flat TB incidence trends in individual countries. We estimated TB cases, deaths, and costs and the total economic burden of TB in the United States. Compared with the base-case scenario, effective global TB control would avert 40,000 (95% uncertainty interval, 29,000-55,000) TB cases in the United States in 2020-2035. TB incidence rates in 2035 would be 43% (95% uncertainty interval, 34-54%) lower than in the base-case scenario, and 49% (95% uncertainty interval, 44-55%) lower than in 2020. Summed over 2020-2035, this represents 0.8 billion dollars (95% uncertainty interval, 0.6-1.0 billion dollars) in averted healthcare costs and $2.5 billion dollars (95% uncertainty interval, 1.7-3.6 billion dollars) in productivity gains. The total U.S. economic burden of TB (including the value of averted TB deaths) would be 21% (95% uncertainty interval, 16-28%) lower (18 billion dollars [95% uncertainty level, 8-32 billion dollars]). In addition to producing major health benefits for high-burden countries, strengthened efforts to achieve effective global TB control could produce substantial health and economic benefits for the United States.
大多数在美国患有结核病(TB)的人都是在国外出生的,美国的结核病发病率越来越受到其他国家感染风险的影响。为了估计有效的全球结核病控制对美国健康和经济结果的潜在影响,我们使用美国和移民出生国结核病流行病学的链接数学模型来估计结果。一个基本情况假设推断了特定国家结核病发病率的趋势。我们将这种情况与 2015 年至 2035 年期间实现 90%结核病发病率降低的目标(世界卫生组织的终结结核病战略所针对的目标)进行了比较。我们还考虑了个别国家结核病发病率趋势持平的悲观情况。我们估计了美国的结核病病例、死亡和费用以及结核病的总经济负担。与基本情况相比,有效的全球结核病控制将避免 2020-2035 年期间美国 40000 例(95%置信区间,29000-55000)结核病病例。2035 年的结核病发病率将比基本情况低 43%(95%置信区间,34-54%),比 2020 年低 49%(95%置信区间,44-55%)。2020-2035 年期间,这代表了 0.80 亿美元(95%置信区间,0.60-1.00 亿美元)的医疗保健成本节省和 25 亿美元(95%置信区间,17-36 亿美元)的生产力收益。结核病对美国的总经济负担(包括避免结核病死亡的价值)将降低 21%(95%置信区间,16-28%)(180 亿美元[95%置信区间,80-320 亿美元])。除了为高负担国家带来重大健康益处外,加强努力实现有效的全球结核病控制还可以为美国带来巨大的健康和经济效益。