| Literature DB >> 18534007 |
Michael Tan1, Dick Menzies, Kevin Schwartzman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Travelers to countries with high tuberculosis incidence can acquire infection during travel. We sought to compare four screening interventions for travelers from low-incidence countries, who visit countries with varying tuberculosis incidence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18534007 PMCID: PMC2443799 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-8-201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Summary of screening strategies
| Strategy | Pre-travel tuberculin skin test results | Interpretation of pre-travel results | Intervention | |
| Test 1 | Test 2 | |||
| Pre-trip two step tuberculin test Treat converters | ≥ 10 mm | N/A | Baseline latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) | No intervention. Passive diagnosis of TB disease pursued if symptomatic post-travel. |
| <10 mm | ≥ 10 mm | Booster effect; no baseline LTBI | No intervention. Passive diagnosis of TB disease pursued if symptomatic post-travel. | |
| <10 mm | <10 mm | No LTBI | Post-trip tuberculin test. Converters prescribed isoniazid. | |
| Pre-trip two step tuberculin test Treat reactors and converters | ≥ 10 mm | N/A | Baseline LTBI | Prescribe isoniazid. |
| <10 mm | ≥ 10 mm | Booster effect | No intervention. Passive diagnosis of TB disease pursued if symptomatic post-travel | |
| <10 mm | <10 mm | No LTBI | Post-trip tuberculin test. Converters prescribed isoniazid | |
| Post-trip tuberculin test | None | None | One post-trip tuberculin skin test. All reactors (≥ 10 mm) prescribed isoniazid. | |
| Post-trip chest x-ray | None | None | Chest x-ray post-trip. Persons with radiographic abnormalities compatible with TB, negative workup for active TB, and TST ≥ 5 mm prescribed isoniazid. | |
| No screening | No intervention before or after trip. Passive diagnosis of TB disease pursued if symptomatic post-travel. | |||
Figure 1Schematic view of decision trees. The top portion of the figure summarizes the sequence of events leading to possible tuberculosis infection after travel, and the use of post-travel screening (by skin testing or chest radiography) to detect latent infection or active disease. If two-step tuberculin skin testing is undertaken before travel, then post-travel testing is limited to travelers with negative baseline results, while those with positive baseline results may be referred for isoniazid treatment, as described in the text and in Table 1. Persons who return from travel with latent infection enter the Markov process illustrated in the lower portion of the figure, although those who receive isoniazid may be cured of latent infection and face no future risk of reactivation.
Model assumptions
| Annual risk of progression from latent tuberculosis (LTBI) to TB disease | |||
| Among persons newly infected during travel | |||
| First two years after infection | 0.025 | 0.02 – 0.05 | [33] |
| Subsequently | 0.001 | 0.001 – 0.002 | [34] |
| Among persons with LTBI before travel, given | |||
| No underlying radiographic abnormalities [see below] | 0.001 | [34] | |
| Underlying radiographic abnormalities [see below] | 0.0066 | [34] | |
| Reduction in risk afforded by: | |||
| Full 9 months of isoniazid, given drug-sensitive latent infection | 90% | [35] | |
| <6 months isoniazid | 0% | [36] | |
| Previous LTBI, among persons who are reinfected during travel | 79% | [37] | |
| Prevalence of isoniazid resistance | |||
| Mexico | 0.072 | 0.072 – 0.12 | [38, 39] |
| Dominican Republic | 0.198 | -- | [40] |
| Haiti | 0.159 | -- | [41] |
| Active TB | |||
| Proportion of travelers with active TB symptomatic upon return | 0.27 | 0.11 – 0.44 | [21, 26] |
| Probability of hospitalization given active TB diagnosed after symptoms | 0.8 | [42] | |
| Probability of hospitalization given active TB diagnosed through screening | 0.5 | [21, 22] | |
| Probability of completing full anti-TB therapy | 1.0 | assumed | |
| Risk of major side effect with full anti-TB therapy | 0.051 | 0.01 – 0.1 | [43] |
| Probability of death, given major treatment side effect | 0.015 | 0.001 – 0.032 | [43–45] |
| Treatment of latent TB infection | |||
| Probability of completing 9 months isoniazid | 0.647 | 0.62 – 1 | [10, 46] |
| Probability of major side effect with isoniazid | 0.003 | [43–45] | |
| Probability of death, given major treatment side effect | 0.015 | 0.001 – 0.032 | [43–45] |
| Tuberculin skin testing | |||
| Probability of boosting, given previous BCG vaccination | 0.25 | [17] | |
| Specificity for LTBI | 0.875 | - | [17] |
| Sensitivity for LTBI | 0.99 | - | [47, 48] |
| Sensitivity for active TB | 0.88 | - | [48] |
| Probability of loss to follow-up between pre- and post- travel evaluations, for repeat testing strategies | 0.34 | [7] | |
| Probability of abnormal chest X-ray upon return from travel | |||
| With preexisting LTBI | 0.11 | 0.07 – 0.15 | [33, 34, 49, 50] |
| With LTBI newly acquired during travel | 0 | assumed | |
| With active TB | 0.95 | 0.9 – 1 | [51, 52] |
| Sputum cultures (3) for | |||
| Specificity | 0.99 | [51] | |
| Sensitivity | 0.9 | [53] | |
| Costs for TB screening and care in the US (expressed in 2005 US dollars) | |||
| Initial clinic visit | $68 | [54, 25] | |
| Tuberculin skin test | $12 | [42, 23] | |
| Follow-up clinic visit after tuberculin test | $36 | [42] | |
| Chest radiograph with reading | $36 | [42] | |
| Isoniazid, 9 months supply | $25 | [54] | |
| 7 outpatient clinic visits during isoniazid treatment | $385 | [54] | |
| Major adverse reaction to isoniazid | $9,834 | [54] | |
| 3 sputa for AFB smear and culture, after abnormal CXR | $126 | [55, 56] | |
| Inpatient treatment of active TB disease | $9,061 | [57] | |
| Outpatient treatment of active TB disease | $2,600 | [42] | |
| Contact investigation and management, per active TB case (identified via screening) | $4,483 | [42, 24] | |
Base case analysis: Cost-effectiveness of screening 21 year-old travelers for 3-month trips
| Traveler's destination Traveler group: Annual risk of infection Screening strategy from least to most expensive | Expected costs per 1,000 (2005 USD) | Expected cases per 1,000 | Incremental cost per 1,000† | Incremental cases prevented per 1,000† | Incremental cost per case prevented† |
| No screening | $7,428 | 1.0 | - | - | - |
| Post-trip TST | $47,082 | 0.8 | $39,654 | 0.2 | $161,196 |
| Post-trip chest x-ray | $58,972 | 0.9 | $11,890 | (0.1) | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for reactors | $68,644 | 0.8 | $9,672 | 0.1 | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for converters only | $68,741 | 0.9 | $97 | (0.1) | Dominated |
| No screening | $9,855 | 1.3 | - | - | - |
| Post-trip TST | $57,666 | 1.0 | $47,811 | 0.3 | $143,578 |
| Post-trip chest x-ray | $61,087 | 1.1 | $3,421 | (0.1) | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for converters only | $71,335 | 1.2 | $10,248 | (0.1) | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for reactors | $74,372 | 1.1 | $3,037 | 0.1 | Dominated |
| No screening | $13,226 | 1.7 | - | - | - |
| Post-trip TST | $51,961 | 1.3 | $38,735 | 0.4 | $102,745 |
| Post-trip chest x-ray | $64,678 | 1.6 | $12,718 | (0.3) | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for reactors | $73,792 | 1.4 | $9,114 | 0.2 | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for converters only | $73,889 | 1.5 | $97 | (0.1) | Dominated |
| No screening | $25,423 | 3.3 | - | - | - |
| Post-trip TST | $73,523 | 2.6 | $48,100 | 0.7 | $65,264 |
| Post-trip chest x-ray | $75,711 | 2.9 | $2,188 | (0.3) | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for reactors | $86,604 | 2.8 | $10,893 | 0.1 | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for converters only | $89,568 | 3.2 | $2,964 | (0.4) | Dominated |
| No screening | $34,041 | 4.4 | - | - | - |
| Post-trip TST | $68,756 | 3.5 | $34,715 | 0.9 | $36,931 |
| Post-trip chest x-ray | $85,163 | 4.3 | $16,407 | (0.8) | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for reactors | $91,797 | 3.8 | $6,634 | 0.5 | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for converters only | $91,893 | 3.9 | $96 | (0.1) | Dominated |
| No screening | $73,594 | 9.6 | - | - | - |
| Post-trip chest x-ray | $119,983 | 8.5 | $46,389 | 1.1 | $40,585* |
| Post-trip TST | $121,073 | 7.4 | $1,090 | 1.1 | $1,014 |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for reactors | $133,556 | 8.1 | $12,484 | (0.7) | Dominated |
| Pre & post trip TST; treatment for converters only | $135,395 | 9.2 | $1,839 | (1.1) | Dominated |
†For each type of traveler, strategies are listed by increasing cost. In the three rightmost columns, the calculation of incremental values (e.g., incremental cost per 1,000) is based on the comparison between each strategy and its next least costly alternative (e.g., a row might show the difference in cost between the second least costly strategy and the least costly strategy; the next row below would then show the cost difference between the third and second least costly strategies; and so on). Values in parentheses indicate an increase in expected cases, instead of cases prevented. "Dominated" means that another strategy is available that is both less costly and effective in preventing more TB cases.
*Dominated by extended dominance. While post-trip chest X-ray is the least costly option, another choice is available which is more attractive on an incremental cost per case prevented basis. The incremental cost per TB case prevented of post-trip TST, compared to no screening, is $21,406.
Sensitivity analysis: Incremental cost per tuberculosis case prevented by post-trip tuberculin testing (versus no screening)
| Annual risk of infection 0.3% | Annual risk of infection 0.8% | Annual risk of infection 2.6% | |||||
| US-born | Mexican-born | US-born | Dominican-born | US-born | Haitian-born | ||
| Base case | $161,196 | $143,578 | $102,745 | $65,264 | $36,931 | $21,406 | |
| Increase traveler age from 21 years† | to 35 years | $163,779 | $148,268 | $103,993 | $67,644 | $37,482 | $22,651 |
| to 55 years | $178,237 | $164,591 | $113,168 | $76,263 | $40,989 | $26,537 | |
| Increase trip duration from 3 months† | to 6 months | $111,832 | $60,889 | $16,787 | $108,476 | $48,731 | $15,261 |
| to 12 months | $67,592 | $71,720 | $31,427 | $31,217 | $5,426 | $8,554 | |
| to 24 months | $35,872 | $41,050 | $13,622 | $16,510 | Cost saving | $2,740 | |
| Change isoniazid completion rate from 65%† | to 50% | $208,386 | $185,056 | $132,752 | $84,964 | $48,813 | $29,113 |
| to 100% | $103,191 | $93,192 | $65,368 | $41,179 | $22,017 | $12,007 | |
†All other parameters held constant at base case value
Figure 2Two-way sensitivity analysis examining the impact of travel duration and annual risk of infection on potential cost savings with the post-trip tuberculin testing strategy, for US-born travelers. During longer trips and/or high annual infection risks, this approach becomes cost-saving, relative to no screening. The two-way sensitivity analysis assumes a 7.2% prevalence of isoniazid resistance, as in Mexico. Hence the threshold trip duration for cost savings among travelers facing infection risks as in the Dominican Republic and Haiti is shorter than in the base case scenario. The base case scenario used the higher prevalence of isoniazid resistance which has been documented in those countries (19.8% and 15.9%).