International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2023)
Time-to-detection in culture of Mycobacterium tuberculosis: performance for assessing index cases contact-positivity
Abstract
Objectives: Time-to-detection (TTD) in culture on liquid media is inversely correlated to bacillary load and should be a contributing factor for assessing tuberculosis transmission. We wanted to assess if TTD was a better alternative than smear status to estimate transmission risk. Methods: From October 2015 to June 2022, we retrospectively studied a cohort of index cases (IC) with pulmonary tuberculosis (tuberculosis disease [TD]) from which samples were culture-positive before treatment. We studied the correlation between TTD and contact-positivity (CP) of IC contacts: CP was defined as CP = 1 (CP group) in case of TD or latent tuberculosis infection (LTI) in at least one screened contact of an IC, and CP = 0 otherwise (contact-negativity [CN] group). Univariate and multivariable analyses (logistic regression) were done. Results: Of the 185 IC, 122 were included, generating 846 contact cases of which 705 were assessed. A transmission event (LTI or TD) was identified in 193 contact cases (transmission rate: 27%). At day 9, 66% and 35% of the IC had their sample positive in culture for CP and CN groups, respectively. Age and TTD ≤9 days were independent criteria of CP (odds ratio 0.97, confidence interval [0.95-0.98], P = 0.002 and odds ratio 3.52, confidence interval [1.59-7.83], P = 0.001, respectively). Conclusion: TTD was a more discriminating parameter than smear status to evaluate the transmission risk of an IC with pulmonary tuberculosis. Therefore, TTD should be considered in the contact-screening strategy around an IC.