Larsson Leyla, Calderwood Claire J, Marambire Edson T, Held Kathrin, Banze Denise, Mfinanga Alfred, Madziva Karlos, Walsh Phoebe, Jacob Joseph, Fernandez Francisco Trinchan, Lungu Patrick, Mesic Anita, Khosa Celso, Minja Lilian T, Mutsvangwa Junior, Bhargava Madhavi, Lauseker Michael, Gupta Rishi K, Heinrich Norbert, Kranzer Katharina
Institute of Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, LMU University Hospital, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany.
The Health Research Unit Zimbabwe, Biomedical Research and Training Institute, Harare, Zimbabwe.
Clin Infect Dis. 2025 Apr 28. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciaf222.
Studies have demonstrated an inverse log-linear relationship between body mass index (BMI) and tuberculosis incidence. However, a person's BMI is dynamic and longitudinal changes may be more informative than cross-sectional assessments. We evaluate the association between cross-sectional and changing BMI and risk of tuberculosis and describe longitudinal trajectories in a high-risk cohort.
ERASE-TB was a prospective longitudinal cohort study of household contacts ≥10 years in Southern Africa (Zimbabwe, Tanzania, and Mozambique), with 6-monthly follow-up up to 24 months. Associations between BMI and tuberculosis were investigated based on baseline (including haemoglobin) and changing BMI, using logistic, Poisson, and Cox models. Prevalent tuberculosis was defined as diagnosis during <30 days after recruitment. Growth mixture modelling (GMM) was used to model longitudinal latent trajectories.
Of 2,107 recruited household contacts (621 [29.5%] adolescents and 1,310 [62.2%] female), 520 (24.7%) were underweight. There were 21 and 41 people diagnosed with prevalent and incident tuberculosis, of whom 5/21 (23.8%) and 12/41 (29.3%) were underweight. Being underweight and anaemic (aHR: 3.77, 95% CI: 1.50-9.51) and >10% negative change in BMI during follow-up (aIRR: 2.27 (95% CI: 0.22-22.9) were associated with increased risk of incident tuberculosis. The association between continuous BMI-for-age Z-scores were non-linear, with increased risk of tuberculosis with lower BMI. Four latent groups were defined in the GMM: increasing, decreasing, and low/high stable BMI.
Declining BMI, regardless of absolute value, is a strong predictor of tuberculosis among household contacts. Longitudinal measurements should be considered in active case finding among tuberculosis-affected households.
研究表明体重指数(BMI)与结核病发病率之间存在反向对数线性关系。然而,一个人的BMI是动态的,纵向变化可能比横断面评估更具信息量。我们评估横断面和变化的BMI与结核病风险之间的关联,并描述高危队列中的纵向轨迹。
ERASE-TB是一项针对南部非洲(津巴布韦、坦桑尼亚和莫桑比克)10岁及以上家庭接触者的前瞻性纵向队列研究,每6个月随访一次,最长随访24个月。使用逻辑回归、泊松回归和Cox模型,基于基线(包括血红蛋白)和变化的BMI研究BMI与结核病之间的关联。现患结核病定义为在招募后<30天内确诊。生长混合模型(GMM)用于模拟纵向潜在轨迹。
在2107名招募的家庭接触者中(621名[29.5%]青少年和1310名[62.2%]女性),520名(24.7%)体重过轻。有21人和41人被诊断为现患和新发结核病,其中5/21(23.8%)和12/41(29.3%)体重过轻。体重过轻和贫血(调整后风险比:3.77,95%置信区间:1.50-9.51)以及随访期间BMI下降>10%(调整后发病率比:2.27[95%置信区间:0.22-22.9])与新发结核病风险增加相关。连续年龄别BMI Z评分之间的关联是非线性的,BMI越低,结核病风险越高。GMM定义了四个潜在组:上升、下降以及低/高稳定BMI组。
无论绝对值如何,BMI下降都是家庭接触者中结核病的有力预测指标。在受结核病影响家庭的主动病例发现中应考虑纵向测量。