Author:
Winje Brita Askeland,Grøneng Gry Marysol,White Richard Aubrey,Akre Peter,Aavitsland Preben,Heldal Einar
Abstract
ObjectivesTo estimate the number needed to screen (NNS) and the number needed to treat (NNT) to prevent one tuberculosis (TB) case in the Norwegian immigrant latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) screening programme and to explore the effect of delay of LTBI treatment initiation.DesignPopulation-based, prospective cohort study.ParticipantsImmigrants to Norway.OutcomeIncident TB.MethodsWe obtained aggregated data on immigration to Norway in 2008–2011 and used data from the Norwegian Surveillance System for Infectious Diseases to assess the number of TB cases arising in this cohort within 5 years after arrival. We calculated the average NNS and NNT for immigrants from the top 10 source countries for TB in Norway and by estimated TB incidence rates in source countries. We explored the sensitivity of these estimates with regard to test performance, treatment efficacy and treatment adherence using an extreme value approach, and assessed the effects of emigration, time to TB diagnosis (to define incident TB) and intervention timing.ResultsNNS and NNT were overall high, with substantial variation. NNT showed numerically stronger negative correlation with TB notification rate in Norway (−0.75 [95% CI −1.00 to −0.44]) than with the WHO incidence rate (IR) (−0.32 [95% CI −0.93 to 0.29]). NNT was affected substantially by emigration and the definition of incident TB. Estimates were lowest for Somali (NNS 99 [70–150], NNT 27 [19–41]) and highest for Thai immigrants (NNS 585 [413–887], NNT 111 [79–116]). Implementing LTBI treatment in immigrants sooner after arrival may improve the effectiveness of the programme.ConclusionUsing TB notifications in Norway, rather than IR in source countries, would improve targeting of immigrants for LTBI management. However, the overall high NNT is a concern and challenges the scale-up of preventive LTBI treatment for significant public health impact. Better data are urgently needed to monitor and evaluate NNS and NNT in countries implementing LTBI screening.
Funder
Norwegian Health association
Reference31 articles.
1. WHO. Guidelines for the management of latent tuberculosis infection Geneva. 2014 http://www.who.int/tb/publications/ltbi_document_page/en/.
2. WHO. Latent TB Infection: Updated and consolidated guidelines for programmatic management. 2018. WHO/CDS/TB/2018.4:74 http://www.who.int/tb/publications/2018/latent-tuberculosis-infection/en/.
3. Tuberculosis and latent tuberculous infection screening of migrants in Europe: comparative analysis of policies, surveillance systems and results;Kunst;Int J Tuberc Lung Dis,2017
4. Migration and tuberculosis in the UK: targeting screening for latent infection to those at greatest risk of disease: Table 1
5. Arnesen TM , Heldal E , Mengshoel AT , et al . Tuberkulose i Norge i 2016 med behandlingsresultater for 2015. Oslo: Folkehelseinstituttet, 2017.
Cited by
7 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献