Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Apr 2024)

Tuberculosis Case Finding in Kulon Progo District, Yogyakarta, Indonesia: Passive versus Active Case Finding Using Mobile Chest X-ray

  • John Silwanus Kaku,
  • Riris Andono Ahmad,
  • Stephanie Main,
  • Dwi Oktofiana,
  • Bintari Dwihardiani,
  • Rina Triasih,
  • Philipp du Cros,
  • Geoffrey Chan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9040075
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 75

Abstract

Read online

Active-case finding (ACF) using chest X-ray is an essential method of finding and diagnosing Tuberculosis (TB) cases that may be missed in Indonesia’s routine TB case finding. This study compares active and passive TB case-finding strategies. A retrospective study of TB case notification was conducted. Data between 1 January and 31 December 2021, was used. The population in this study were TB cases notified from Kulon Progo District health facilities, including those found through routine activities or active-case findings. A total of 249 TB cases were diagnosed in Kulon Progo in 2021, and 102 (41%) were bacteriologically confirmed. The TB patients’ ages ranged from 0 to 85 years (median 52, IQR 31–61). The majority of cases were male (59%, 147/249) and mostly among people aged 15–59 (61.4%, 153/249). The proportion of clinical TB diagnoses among cases found from active-case findings was 74.7% (68/91) while the proportion among passive-case findings was 50% (79/158). Active-case finding contributed 91 (36.5%) TB cases to the total cases detected in Kulon Progo in 2021. The use of chest X-rays in active-case findings likely contributed to the detection of a higher proportion of clinical TB than in passive-case findings.

Keywords