| Literature DB >> 23166738 |
Christiaan Mulder1, Janneke Harting, Niesje Jansen, Martien W Borgdorff, Frank van Leth.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To assess whether public health nurses adhered to Dutch guidelines for tuberculosis contact investigations and to explore which factors influenced the process of identifying contacts, prioritizing contacts for testing and scaling up a contact investigation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23166738 PMCID: PMC3498228 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0049649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The three steps during a CI according to Dutch national guidelines: identifying contacts, prioritizing contacts, and scaling up a CI.
| Description | Criteria | Level of evidence |
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| Individuals who have been exposedto the index case and have a substantialrisk of being infected are eligible to beidentified as a contact. This risk is based on the infectiousness of the index case,the period of exposure and location of exposure. | Clinical characteristics of the index case: having sputum smear positive TB, cavernous TB, poor coughing behavior. | Risk of infection is significantly associated with smear positive TB and cavitary lesions |
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| Prolonged and frequent exposure to the index case during the period of infectiousness. The standard period of infectiousnessis set at three months prior to the diagnosis of TB. | Increased hours of exposure to the index case is associated with being infected | |
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| Exposure to the index case in a location which is small, dark,warm, humid, crowded, and poorly ventilated. | The volume of air shared between the index case and contacts dilutes the infectious droplets, but this has not been validated entirely | |
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| Contacts should be prioritized for testing by classifying them as close, casual or community contacts. | Contacts should be prioritized in conformity with theclassification table which is based on a combination of the period andlocation of exposure (see | The classification table is based on the guidelines concerning contact investigation published by CDC in 2005 |
| Close contacts and vulnerable contacts, like children and immunocompromised contacts, have priority for testing. | Evidence-based. Immunocompromised contacts and vulnerable contacts have an increased risk of progression to (severe) active TB | |
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| Stone-in-the-pond principle | ||
| Testing should be started in the close and vulnerable contacts.When the number of close contacts is too small | Not evidence-based. | |
| Testing should be scaled up to the casual, and subsequently community, contacts when the prevalence of infection in thetested contacts is markedly higher | The prevalence of infection in contacts has shown to diminish when the level of exposure to the index case became less | |
| The background prevalence is age-specific and in TheNetherlands is reported only for the native population. It ranges fromless than 1% for people born after 1965 to >5% for people bornbefore 1945 ( | This background prevalence was assessed among army recruits when they were aged 20 years |
Abbreviations: CDC: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CI: contact investigation, TB: tuberculosis.
Not further specified in guidelines.
Prioritizing contacts for testing according to the classification table as suggested by the national guidelines.
| Period of contact | ||||||
| Intensity | Size of location ofexposure is comparablewith | Estimated volume or location | Prolonged | Less prolonged | ||
| Daily or>48 hours | Weekly or 6–48 hours | Incidentally or 1–6 hours | Sporadic or <1 hours | |||
| Close | Car | <5 m3 | 1 | 1 and 2 | 2 | 2 |
| Room | 10–30 m3 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 or 3 | |
| Less close | Classroom/office | 100–200 m3 | 2 | 2 or 3 | 3 | 3 |
| Closed room bigger than ahouse | >200 m3 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 3 or other | |
(1 = close contact, 2 = casual contact, 3 = community contact).
Accounting for survival of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (air refreshment and circulation) and ventilation.
Use ‘room’ if the contact have been exposed to the index case within a distance of <1–2 m in this location.
Estimated age-specific background prevalence of LTBI in native population in 2005 as reported in the national guidelines.
| Year of birth contact | % tuberculin skin test positive |
| 1945–1954 | 5% |
| 1955–1964 | 2% |
| 1965–current | 1% |
| Overall | 2,40% |
Not vaccinated with bacille Calmette-Guérin.
Association of scaling up a CI with the number of close, casual and community contacts evaluated and detected with LTBI found in the 14 CIs.
| Close contacts | Casual contacts | Community contacts | |||||||||
| Case | PHN/PHS | Ethnicity indexcase | Number of contacts tested | Number of contacts with LTBI | Scaled up? | Number of contacts tested | Number of contacts with LTBI | Scaled up? | Number of contacts tested | Number ofcontacts with LTBI | Scaled up? |
| 1 | 1/2 | Native | 3 | 1 | Yes | 1 | 0 | Yes | 1 | 0 | No |
| 2 | 2/2 | Immigrant | 1 | 0 | Yes | 38 | 0 | Yes | 3 | 0 | No |
| 3 | 3/2 | Immigrant | 32 | 0 | Yes | 8 | 0 | No | – | – | – |
| 4 | 4/2 | Immigrant | 22 | 4 | Yes | 11 | 0 | No | – | – | – |
| 5 | 1/3 | Immigrant | 6 | 0 | Yes | 4 | 0 | Yes | 1 | 0 | No |
| 6 | 2/3 | Native | 23 | 6 | Yes | 63 | 2 | Yes | 1660 | 23 | Yes |
| 7 | 1/4 | Immigrant | 23 | 2 | Yes | 1 | 0 | No | – | – | – |
| 8 | 1/5 | Immigrant | 5 | 1 (+1 TB) | Yes | 28 | 0 | No | – | – | – |
| 9 | 2/5 | Immigrant | 25 | 5 | Yes | 5 | 0 | No | – | – | – |
| 10 | 1/6 | Immigrant | 5 | 1 (+2 TB) | Yes | 129 | 8 (+1 TB) | No | – | – | – |
| 11 | 2/6 | Immigrant | 17 | 0 | No | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| 12 | 3/6 | Immigrant | 21 | 5 (+2 TB) | Yes | 114 | 8 | No | – | – | – |
| 13 | 1/7 | Immigrant | 26 | 5 | Yes | 4 | 1 | Yes | 0 | – | No |
| 14 | 1/8 | Native | 1 | 0 | Yes | 7 | 0 | Yes | 23 | 0 | No |
Tested concurrently with the previous group of contacts.
Scaled up according to guidelines because the decision was based on the prevalence of infection among the close contacts.
Scaled up according to guidelines because the PHN considered the number of close contacts too small to accurately assess the prevalence of infection.
Correctly not scaled up because decision was based on prevalence of infection among the close contacts.
Incorrectly scaled up to casual contacts since no infection was found among the close contacts.
Incorrectly scaled up since casual contacts were tested concurrently with close contacts.
Incorrectly scaled up since casual contact was considered a ‘test case’.
Incorrectly scaled up since casual contacts were anxious.
Scaled up to community contacts according to guidelines because the decision was based on the prevalence of infection among the casual contacts.
Incorrectly scaled up to community contacts since no infection was found among the casual contacts.
Incorrectly not scaled up to community contacts although prevalence of infection among casual contacts was high.
Not scaled up to community contacts because according to PHN there was no well defined group of community contacts.
Questions of the topic list used to explore how public health nurses identified and prioritized contacts and scaled up a CI.
| Questions | Probing questions | |
| Identification of contacts | How did you identify the contacts? | Did someone else than the index case assisted with naming the contacts? |
| Did you measure the level of exposurebetween the contacts and the index case? | How? How did you measure the frequency/duration/intensity of exposure? | |
| To what extend is the list of contacts completedo you think? | Why do you think it is/is not complete? What efforts did you undertake to identify all contacts? | |
| How is the relationship between you and theindex case? | How was the willingness of the index case to name his/her contacts? Did you experience any barriers in identifying contacts? | |
| Prioritization for testing | How were the contacts prioritized in thiscontact investigation? | When were the contacts prioritized? Who decided on this prioritization? Did you discuss this with the physician specialist? Why/why not? |
| To what extent did you experience difficultieswith prioritizing contacts? | What were the reasons for experiencing these difficulties? | |
| How did you differentiate between close andcasual contacts? | Which criteria you considered most important? Duration of exposure? Frequency? Intimacy? Other criteria? Why? | |
| How did you differentiate between casual and community contacts | Which criteria you considered most important? Duration of exposure? Frequency? Intimacy? Other criteria? Why? | |
| Scaling up | Were casual contacts evaluated? | How and why was decided to test casual contacts? Who made this decision |
| Were casual contacts tested concurrently or subsequently of close contacts? | For what reason? | |
| Were community contacts tested? | How and why was decided that community contacts were tested? Who decided this? If not: How and why was decided not to test community contacts? In what hypothetically situation would you have scaled up to test casual/community contacts? Which contacts would then have been tested? |