| Literature DB >> 22586476 |
Maunank Shah1, Danielle DiPietro, Adena Greenbaum, Sherry Ketemepi, Maria Martins-Evora, Vincent Marsiglia, Susan E Dorman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube (QFT-GIT) is considered an alternative to the tuberculin skin test (TST) for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) infection, but the programmatic impact of QFT-GIT implementation is largely unknown. In March, 2010, the Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD) introduced routine QFT-GIT testing for individuals referred to the TB program for suspected latent TB infection (LTBI).Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22586476 PMCID: PMC3346719 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0036551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of individuals referred to Baltimore City Health Department TB Clinic for evaluation of suspected M. tuberculosis infection, by study period.
| Characteristic | Referrals | |||
| Pre-QFT-GIT | Post-QFT-GIT | P value | ||
| Number | 607 | 750 | ||
| Evaluated by BCHD during in-person clinic encounter | 452 (75%) | 567(76%) | 0.631 | |
| Gender | Female | 255(42%) | 325(43%) | 0.624 |
| Male | 352(58%) | 425(57%) | ||
| Age | Mean Age(SD) | 36.1 (15.3) | 36.4 (16.5) | 0.77 |
| Foreign-born | 363(59%) | 507(68%) | 0.003 | |
| Ethnicity | Black | 260(43%) | 296(39%) | 0.002 |
| Asian/Pacific Island | 199(32%) | 224(30%) | ||
| Latino | 65(11%) | 122(17%) | ||
| White | 43(7%) | 35(5%) | ||
| Other/Unavailable | 40(7%) | 73(10%) | ||
| HIV | Positive | 11/452(2%) | 19/567(3%) | 0.599 |
| Negative | 316/452(70%) | 401/567(71%) | ||
| Refused/Unknown | 125/452(28%) | 147/567(26%) | ||
| Referral Source: | Drug Treatment Program | 134 (22%) | 104(14%) | <0.001 |
| Refugee | 194(32%) | 237(32%) | 0.904 | |
| B-Waiver | 25(4%) | 72(10%) | <0.001 | |
| Health Fairs | 19(3%) | 40(5%) | 0.047 | |
| Civil Surgeons | 21(3%) | 32(4%) | 0.441 | |
| HIV clinics | 7(1%) | 17(2%) | 0.121 | |
| Local Health Departments | 52(9%) | 66(9%) | 0.879 | |
| Dept of Corrections | 4(1%) | 3(.5%) | 0.509 | |
| Occupational Health | 14(2%) | 9(1%) | 0.116 | |
| Obstetricians | 20(3%) | 22(3%) | 0.706 | |
| Primary Care Providers/Other | 117(19%) | 148(20%) | 0.865 | |
Abbreviations: SD, Standard Deviation. BCHD, Baltimore City Health Department.
Ethnicity data was based on referral documentation and/or initial evaluation at BCHD. P-value for global comparison of equality of proportions of ethnicities by χ2 test.
HIV test results are available only for those that came to BCHD for evaluation. HIV status not available for those who did not complete an LTBI evaluation at BCHD.
Includes referrals from other local health departments in Maryland and other states, as well as employment TB testing conducted through other BCHD programs.
Figure 1Flow of LTBI patient evaluation and testing at BCHD in the post-QFT-GIT period.
*Among 750 referrals, 690 had a TST by referring source, 23 had a QFT-GIT by the referring source, and 5 had both a QFT-GIT and TST performed by referral source); 32 individuals were referred as B-Waivers without prior LTBI testing based on abnormal CXR during immigration. Among 567 referrals that came to BCHD for evaluation, 525 were referred with a TST result and 19 for a positive QFT-GIT and 5 individuals had both a QFT-GIT and TST performed by referral source; 18 B-waiver referrals were evaluated without prior LTBI testing. Among these 567 referrals, 168 had only a TST (30%), 37 had only a QFT-GIT (67), and 362 (64%) had both a TST and a QFT-GIT test result. Of 399 QFT-GIT test results among referrals evaluated by BCHD, 375 had QFT-GIT testing at BCHD and 24 had QFT-GIT testing from referral source.
Factors associated with QFT-GIT test positivity among those tested at BCHD.
| Characteristic | Referral for LTBI | OR | AOR | ||
| N | QFT-GIT positive(%) | ||||
| QFT-GIT performed by BCHD | 375 * | ||||
| Interpretable QFT-GIT result available | 363* | 185 (51%) | |||
| Gender | Female | 166 | 81 (49%) | REF | REF |
| Male | 197 | 104 (53%) | 1.2(.78–1.8) | 1.2(0.79–2.0) | |
| Age | 0-2 | 0 | – | – | – |
| 2-12 | 3 | 1 (33%) | 0.46 (0.03–5.2) | 0.11(0.01–1.5) | |
| 13-17 | 23 | 11 (48%) | 0.83(.33–2.1) | 0.39(0.14–1.2) | |
| 18-50 | 251 | 128 (51%) | 0.94(.58–1.5) | 0.59(0.32–1.1) | |
| >50 | 86 | 45 (52%) | REF | REF | |
| Birthplace | Not Foreign-born | 107 | 39 (36%) | REF | REF |
| Foreign-born | 256 | 146(57%) |
|
| |
| Ethnicity | White | 18 | 7 (39%) | REF | REF |
| ° | Asian/Pacific Island | 123 | 70 (56%) | 2.1 (0.75–5.7) | 1.2(0.37–3.9) |
| ° | Black | 150 | 77(51%) | 1.6 (0.61–4.5) | 1.3(0.45–4.0) |
| ° | Latino | 56 | 26(46%) | 1.4(0.47–4.0) | 0.73(0.21–2.5) |
| ° | Other/Unavailable | 16 | 5(31%) | 0.7(0.17–3.0) | 0.73(0.16–3.3) |
| HIV | Positive | 9 | 1(11%) |
| 0.17(0.02–1.77) |
| ° | Negative | 295 | 154 (52%) | REF | REF |
| Unknown | 59 | 30 (51%) | 0.94 (.54–1.7) | 1.6(0.80–3.1) | |
| Referral Source: | Drug Treatment Programs | 44 | 14 (32%) | 0.70(0.3–1.6) |
|
| ° | Refugee Services | 144 | 92 (64%) | 2.7 (1.5–4.9) | |
| B-Waiver | 34 | 16 (47%) | 1.4 (0.58–3.1) | ||
| Health Fairs | 18 | 8 (44%) | 1.2(0.42–3.5) | ||
| ° | Immigration/Civil Surgeons | 6 | 3 (50%) | 1.5(0.28–8.1) | |
| ° | HIV | 8 | 1(13%) | 0.22 (0.02–1.9) | |
| ° | Local Health Departments | 35 | 22(63%) | 2.6 (1.1–6.0) | |
| Dept of Corrections | 1 | 0 (0%) | – | ||
| Occupational Health | 4 | 3 (75) | 4.6 (0.45–46) | ||
| Obstetricians | 6 | 1 (16%) | 0.3 (0.03–2.8) | ||
| Primary Care Providers/Other | 63 | 25 (40%) | REF | ||
| TST Induration | 0–10mm | 3(38%) | REF | REF | |
| 10–15mm | 184 | 76(41%) | 1.2 (0.27–5.1) | 0.99(0.18–5.5) | |
| 15–20mm | 95 | 59(62%) | 2.7 (0.6–12) | 2.4(0.41–13.9) | |
| >20mm | 59 | 40(68%) | 3.5(0.8–16) | 2.8(0.47–16.7) | |
Only individuals with QFT-GIT performed by BCHD are included. 11 individuals had blood drawn for QFT-GIT but did not have interpretable results due to insufficient blood volume during venipuncture, sample transportation issues, or processing error. There was 1 indeterminate result.
°p<0.001 for both univariate and multivariate analysis comparing foreign-born to US born individuals.
°° P = 0.042 comparing HIV positive to HIV negative individuals.
Referral source was omitted from multivariate regression model due to collinearity with birth country.
p = 0.001 comparing those referred from Refugee health services to those referred from primary care providers/other; p = 0.03 comparing those referred from local health departments to those referred from primary care providers/other.
Concordance of TST and QFT-GIT results among referred individuals that came to BCHD for LTBI evaluation and had both tests performed.
| TST negative | TST positive | Total | |
|
| 4 (1%) | 164 (47%) | 168 |
|
| 4 (1%) | 179 (51%) | 183 |
|
| 0 | 1 (0.25%) | 1 |
|
| 8 | 344 | 352 |
Overall, 352 individuals had a TST and interpretable QFT-GIT result available. There was an overall concordance of 52.3%.
8 individuals with negative TST results were referred and evaluated by BCHD. 4 individuals with B-waivers had negative TST, but were referred due to an abnormal CXR; 4 individuals had both TST and QFT-GIT performed by referral source.
Differences in LTBI diagnosis among referrals to BCHD between study periods and by QFT-GIT test status.
| Group | QFT-GIT category | Referral N | Evaluated by BCHD N (%) | Diagnosed LTBI N (%) | Initiation of treatment N (%) | Completion of treatment |
| Pre-QFT-GIT | Total | 607 | 452 (75%) |
| 341 (77%) | 251 (74%) |
| QFT-GIT performed | 3 (1%) | 3 (100%)°° | 2 (66%) | 2(100%) | ||
| • QFT-GIT negative | • – | • – | • – | • – | ||
| • QFT-GIT positive | • 3 (100%) | • 3 (100%) | • 2 (66%) | • 2 (100%) | ||
| No QFT-GIT performed | 449 (99%) | 442 (98%)°° | 339 (77%) | 249(78%) | ||
| Post-QFT-GIT | Total | 750 | 567 (76%) |
| 307 (77%) | 174/244 (75%) |
| QFT-GIT performed | 399 (70%) |
| 174 (76%) | 105/137(77%) | ||
| • QFT-GIT negative | • 178 (45%) | • 10 (6%) | • 10(100%) | • 4/7(57%) | ||
| • QFT-GIT positive | • 209 (52%) | • 209 (100%) | • 157(75%) | • 97/120(81%) | ||
| No QFT-GIT performed | 168 (30%) |
| 133 (80%) | 69/107(65%) |
includes individuals that had QFT-GIT performed by referral source. 11/399 individuals in the post-QFT-GIT period had QFT-GIT drawn but no results available; there was 1 indeterminate result in the post-QFT-GIT-period.
°p<.001 comparing final diagnosis of LTBI between pre-QFT-GIT and post-QFT-GIT periods.
°°p = .827 for pre-QFT-GIT period comparing LTBI diagnosis between those with and without a QFT-GIT result; p<.001 in post-QFT-GIT period comparing LTBI diagnosis between those with and without QFT-GIT performed.
p = .81 comparing treatment initiation among those diagnosed with LTBI between pre-QFT-GIT and post-QFT-GIT periods; p = 0.690 comparing treatment initiation between those with and without QFT-GIT performed in the pre-QFT-GIT period; p = .349 comparing treatment intiation between those with and without QFT-GIT performed in the post-QFT-GIT period.
Analysis restricted to those who started an INH X 9 months regimen prior to Nov 30, 2010 or Rifampin X 4 months prior to March 30, 2011 to allow time for completion. p = .606 comparing overall treatment completion between pre-QFT-GIT period and post-QFT-GIT period. p = 0.101 comparing those with and without QFT-GIT performed in the post-QFT-GIT period; p = 0.70 comparing those with and without QFT-GIT in the pre-QFT-GIT period.