Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jun 2013)

Zoonotic Mycobacterium bovis–induced Tuberculosis in Humans

  • Borna Müller,
  • Salome Dürr,
  • Silvia Alonso,
  • Jan Hattendorf,
  • Cláudio J.M. Laisse,
  • Sven D.C. Parsons,
  • Paul D. van Helden,
  • Jakob Zinsstag

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1906.120543
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 6
pp. 899 – 908

Abstract

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We aimed to estimate the global occurrence of zoonotic tuberculosis (TB) caused by Mycobacterium bovis or M. caprae infections in humans by performing a multilingual, systematic review and analysis of relevant scientific literature of the last 2 decades. Although information from many parts of the world was not available, data from 61 countries suggested a low global disease incidence. In regions outside Africa included in this study, overall median proportions of zoonotic TB of ≤1.4% in connection with overall TB incidence rates ≤71/100,000 population/year suggested low incidence rates. For countries of Africa included in the study, we multiplied the observed median proportion of zoonotic TB cases of 2.8% with the continental average overall TB incidence rate of 264/100,000 population/year, which resulted in a crude estimate of 7 zoonotic TB cases/100,000 population/year. These generally low incidence rates notwithstanding, available data indicated substantial consequences of this disease for some population groups and settings.

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