International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Nov 2019)

Assessment of active tuberculosis findings in the eastern area of China: A 3-year sequential screening study

  • Kui Liu,
  • Ying Peng,
  • Qinrong Zhou,
  • Jun Cheng,
  • Hao Yu,
  • Lihong Tang,
  • Bin Chen,
  • Wei Wang,
  • Fei Wang,
  • Tieniu He,
  • Yu Zhang,
  • Lin Zhou,
  • Songhua Chen,
  • Chengliang Chai,
  • Hongdan Bao,
  • Xiaomeng Wang,
  • Jianmin Jiang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 88
pp. 34 – 40

Abstract

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Background: Tuberculosis (TB) is a critical global public threat, and limited epidemiology studies have been performed to explore the efficacy of active TB screening. Methods: Three sites located in eastern China were chosen in 2013, and three rounds of systematic screenings were performed in permanent residents aged older than 15 years. Results: The TB incidence showed a downtrend after several rounds of active screening at the three sites, and a significant change was observed at site A in the overall population. In the target population at sites A and B, both the elderly and people with a history of TB had a remarkable decline through the first or second round of screening. The implementation of active case-finding identified 2.36 [1.47,3.81] (2013 vs. 2012) and 1.49 [1.1,2.03] (2013–2015 vs. 2010–2012) more potential cases than the passive case-finding by the surveillance system at site A. Conclusions: Active case-finding of tuberculosis might be effective in high prevalence area with a low economic level, particularly among the elderly and people with a history of TB. Additionally, new rapid diagnosis technology should be considered to decrease the prevalence among people with a history of TB. Ultimately, active screening identified more active TB cases than passive case-finding, particularly in high prevalence area with underdeveloped economics. Keywords: Tuberculosis, Active screening, High prevalence, Target population