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Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status

AIM: To describe the burden of tuberculosis (TB) in Cape Town by calculating TB incidence rates stratified by age and HIV-status, assessing the contribution of retreatment disease and estimating the cumulative lifetime TB risk in HIV-negative individuals. METHODS: Details of TB cases were abstracted...

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Autores principales: Wood, Robin, Lawn, Stephen D., Caldwell, Judy, Kaplan, Richard, Middelkoop, Keren, Bekker, Linda-Gail
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3189963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22016763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025098
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author Wood, Robin
Lawn, Stephen D.
Caldwell, Judy
Kaplan, Richard
Middelkoop, Keren
Bekker, Linda-Gail
author_facet Wood, Robin
Lawn, Stephen D.
Caldwell, Judy
Kaplan, Richard
Middelkoop, Keren
Bekker, Linda-Gail
author_sort Wood, Robin
collection PubMed
description AIM: To describe the burden of tuberculosis (TB) in Cape Town by calculating TB incidence rates stratified by age and HIV-status, assessing the contribution of retreatment disease and estimating the cumulative lifetime TB risk in HIV-negative individuals. METHODS: Details of TB cases were abstracted from the 2009 electronic TB register. Population denominators were estimated from census data and actuarial estimates of HIV prevalence, allowing calculation of age-specific and HIV-stratified TB notification rates. RESULTS: The 2009 mid-year population was 3,443,010 (3,241,508 HIV-negative and 201,502 HIV-positive individuals). There were 29,478 newly notified TB cases of which 56% were laboratory confirmed. HIV status was recorded for 87% of cases and of those with known HIV-status 49% were HIV-negative and 51% were positive. Discrete peaks in the incidence of non-HIV-associated TB occurred at three ages: 511/100,000 at 0–4 years of age, 553/100,000 at 20–24 years and 628/100,000 at 45–49 years with 1.5%, 19% and 45% being due to retreatment TB, respectively. Only 15.5% of recurrent cases had a history of TB treatment failure or default. The cumulative lifetime risks in the HIV-negative population of all new TB episodes and new smear-positive TB episodes were 24% and 12%, respectively; the lifetime risk of retreatment disease was 9%. The HIV-positive notification rate was 6,567/100,000 (HIV-associated TB rate ratio = 17). Although retreatment cases comprised 30% of the HIV-associated TB burden, 88% of these patients had no history of prior treatment failure or default. CONCLUSIONS: The annual burden of TB in this city is huge. TB in the HIV-negative population contributed almost half of the overall disease burden and cumulative lifetime risks were similar to those reported in the pre-chemotherapy era. Retreatment TB contributed significantly to both HIV-associated and non-HIV-associated TB but infrequently followed prior inadequate treatment. This likely reflects ongoing TB transmission to both HIV-negative and positive individuals.
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spelling pubmed-31899632011-10-20 Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status Wood, Robin Lawn, Stephen D. Caldwell, Judy Kaplan, Richard Middelkoop, Keren Bekker, Linda-Gail PLoS One Research Article AIM: To describe the burden of tuberculosis (TB) in Cape Town by calculating TB incidence rates stratified by age and HIV-status, assessing the contribution of retreatment disease and estimating the cumulative lifetime TB risk in HIV-negative individuals. METHODS: Details of TB cases were abstracted from the 2009 electronic TB register. Population denominators were estimated from census data and actuarial estimates of HIV prevalence, allowing calculation of age-specific and HIV-stratified TB notification rates. RESULTS: The 2009 mid-year population was 3,443,010 (3,241,508 HIV-negative and 201,502 HIV-positive individuals). There were 29,478 newly notified TB cases of which 56% were laboratory confirmed. HIV status was recorded for 87% of cases and of those with known HIV-status 49% were HIV-negative and 51% were positive. Discrete peaks in the incidence of non-HIV-associated TB occurred at three ages: 511/100,000 at 0–4 years of age, 553/100,000 at 20–24 years and 628/100,000 at 45–49 years with 1.5%, 19% and 45% being due to retreatment TB, respectively. Only 15.5% of recurrent cases had a history of TB treatment failure or default. The cumulative lifetime risks in the HIV-negative population of all new TB episodes and new smear-positive TB episodes were 24% and 12%, respectively; the lifetime risk of retreatment disease was 9%. The HIV-positive notification rate was 6,567/100,000 (HIV-associated TB rate ratio = 17). Although retreatment cases comprised 30% of the HIV-associated TB burden, 88% of these patients had no history of prior treatment failure or default. CONCLUSIONS: The annual burden of TB in this city is huge. TB in the HIV-negative population contributed almost half of the overall disease burden and cumulative lifetime risks were similar to those reported in the pre-chemotherapy era. Retreatment TB contributed significantly to both HIV-associated and non-HIV-associated TB but infrequently followed prior inadequate treatment. This likely reflects ongoing TB transmission to both HIV-negative and positive individuals. Public Library of Science 2011-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3189963/ /pubmed/22016763 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025098 Text en Wood et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wood, Robin
Lawn, Stephen D.
Caldwell, Judy
Kaplan, Richard
Middelkoop, Keren
Bekker, Linda-Gail
Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status
title Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status
title_full Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status
title_fullStr Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status
title_full_unstemmed Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status
title_short Burden of New and Recurrent Tuberculosis in a Major South African City Stratified by Age and HIV-Status
title_sort burden of new and recurrent tuberculosis in a major south african city stratified by age and hiv-status
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3189963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22016763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025098
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