Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa.
Vietnam National Tuberculosis Program-University of California San Francisco Research Collaboration Unit, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2021 Nov 15;204(10):1211-1221. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202101-0136OC.
The Southeast Asian tuberculosis burden is high, and it remains unclear if urban indoor air pollution in this setting is exacerbating the epidemic. To determine the associations of latent tuberculosis with common urban indoor air pollution sources (secondhand smoke, indoor motorcycle emissions, and cooking) in Southeast Asia. We enrolled child household contacts of patients with microbiologically confirmed active tuberculosis in Vietnam, from July 2017 to December 2019. We tested children for latent tuberculosis and evaluated air pollution exposures with questionnaires and personal aerosol sampling. We tested hypotheses using generalized estimating equations. We enrolled 72 patients with tuberculosis (27% with cavitary disease) and 109 of their child household contacts. Latent tuberculosis was diagnosed in 58 (53%) household contacts at baseline visit. Children experienced a 2.56-fold increased odds of latent tuberculosis for each additional household member who smoked (95% confidence interval, 1.27-5.16). Odds were highest among children exposed to indoor smokers and children <5 years old exposed to household smokers. Each residential floor above street-level pollution decreased the odds of latent tuberculosis by 36% (adjusted odds ratio, 0.64; 95% confidence interval, 0.42-0.96). Motorcycles parked inside children's homes and cooking with liquid petroleum gas compared with electricity increased the odds of latent tuberculosis, whereas kitchen ventilation decreased the effect, but these findings were not statistically significant. Common urban indoor air pollution sources were associated with increased odds of latent tuberculosis infection in child household contacts of patients with active tuberculosis.
东南亚的结核病负担很高,目前尚不清楚这种情况下城市室内空气污染是否会加剧疫情。为了确定潜伏性结核病与东南亚常见城市室内空气污染源(二手烟、室内摩托车排放物和烹饪)之间的关联。我们在 2017 年 7 月至 2019 年 12 月期间在越南招募了经微生物学证实患有活动性肺结核的患者的儿童家庭接触者。我们对儿童进行了潜伏性结核病检测,并通过问卷调查和个人气溶胶采样评估了空气污染暴露情况。我们使用广义估计方程检验了假设。我们共招募了 72 名结核病患者(27%有空洞病变)及其 109 名儿童家庭接触者。在基线访视时,有 58 名(53%)家庭接触者被诊断患有潜伏性结核病。对于每个额外的吸烟家庭成员,儿童患有潜伏性结核病的几率增加了 2.56 倍(95%置信区间,1.27-5.16)。与接触室内吸烟者和接触家庭吸烟者的 5 岁以下儿童相比,这种几率最高。与居住在街道污染水平以下的楼层相比,居住在街道污染水平以上的楼层每增加一层,患有潜伏性结核病的几率降低 36%(调整后的优势比,0.64;95%置信区间,0.42-0.96)。停放在儿童家中的摩托车和使用液化石油气做饭而不是用电做饭会增加潜伏性结核病的几率,而厨房通风则会降低这种效果,但这些发现没有统计学意义。常见的城市室内空气污染源与活动性肺结核患者的儿童家庭接触者中潜伏性结核病感染的几率增加有关。