| Literature DB >> 27004556 |
Manish Pareek1,2, Christina Greenaway3, Teymur Noori4, Jose Munoz5, Dominik Zenner6,7.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) causes significant morbidity and mortality in high-income countries with foreign-born individuals bearing a disproportionate burden of the overall TB case burden in these countries. In this review of tuberculosis and migration we discuss the impact of migration on the epidemiology of TB in low burden countries, describe the various screening strategies to address this issue, review the yield and cost-effectiveness of these programs and describe the gaps in knowledge as well as possible future solutions.The reasons for the TB burden in the migrant population are likely to be the reactivation of remotely-acquired latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) following migration from low/intermediate-income high TB burden settings to high-income, low TB burden countries.TB control in high-income countries has historically focused on the early identification and treatment of active TB with accompanying contact-tracing. In the face of the TB case-load in migrant populations, however, there is ongoing discussion about how best to identify TB in migrant populations. In general, countries have generally focused on two methods: identification of active TB (either at/post-arrival or increasingly pre-arrival in countries of origin) and secondly, conditionally supported by WHO guidance, through identifying LTBI in migrants from high TB burden countries. Although health-economic analyses have shown that TB control in high income settings would benefit from providing targeted LTBI screening and treatment to certain migrants from high TB burden countries, implementation issues and barriers such as sub-optimal treatment completion will need to be addressed to ensure program efficacy.Entities:
Keywords: Migration; Review; Screening; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27004556 PMCID: PMC4804514 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-016-0595-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Key messages about tuberculosis and migration in high-income countries
| • Tuberculosis continues to be a public health concern in high-income countries |
| • Tuberculosis burden in high-income countries is primarily amongst the foreign-born, migrant population |
| • The reasons underlying this burden are the interaction of migration from high TB burden countries and the reactivation of remotely acquire latent tuberculosis infection in the first five years after arrival |
| • Genotyping data suggests that there is relatively little transmission in migrant communities in the receiving country |
| • Methods of TB control in migrant population have historically focused on identifying active tuberculosis but the yields for this remain relatively low |
| • Screening migrants for latent tuberculosis infection may have a higher yield although implementation may be difficult |
| • The health economics of screening migrants for active and/or latent tuberculosis is a topic of much debate |
| • Targeted pre-arrival screening for active TB and post arrival screening for latent tuberculosis infection in migrants from intermediate/high TB burden settings may provide the most cost-effective solution |
| • Implementation of programmatic screening is limited by uptake, acceptance and completion of therapy |
Fig. 1Percentage of tuberculosis notifications in the foreign-born for selected OECD high-income countries
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of migration, factors determining how incident active tuberculosis occurs and methods of screening migrants. Footnote: As a by-product of post-arrival latent TB screening, some cases of prevalent active TB may be identified
Yields for active tuberculosis from previous meta-analyses
| Author | Year | Yield for active tuberculosis (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Pre-arrival | At/post-arrival | ||
| Klinkenberg [ | 2009 | 0.35 | 1.21 | 0.31 |
| 0.51 | ||||
| Arshad [ | 2010 | 0.35 | - | 0.35 |
| Aldridge [ | 2014 | 0.22 | 0.22 | - |
Potential strengths and weaknesses of different migrant screening methods
| Screening methodology | ||
|---|---|---|
| Screening for active tuberculosis | Screening for latent tuberculosis infection | |
| Screening tool used | Chest x-ray | Tuberculin skin test |
| Interferon gamma release assay | ||
| Screening location | Pre-arrival | Post-arrival |
| At arrival | ||
| Post-arrival | ||
| Strengths | Able to identify active TB | Identifies latent TB before reactivation occurs |
| Able to identify infectious individuals | Can be built into community programmes | |
| Can be integrated into immigration processes | Targeted screening likely to be cost-effective | |
| Weaknesses | Low yields for active TB | Programmatically difficult to implement |
| Uncertain cost-effectiveness (unless screening targeted) | Numbers accepting and completing treatment may be suboptimal | |
| Does not identify patients with latent TB who can go on to reactivate | ||