| Literature DB >> 27218013 |
Pennan M Barry1, Alexander W Kay1, Jennifer M Flood1, James Watt1.
Abstract
This review of tuberculosis epidemiology is intended to provide a historical perspective on the public health approach to tuberculosis (TB) control in California. This historical context offers a lens through which to view current epidemiologic trends and insight into how new therapeutic tools can be applied. Since 1993, the year detailed case reporting was instituted, California has had a decrease in recent TB transmission as evidenced by a reduction in pediatric cases and an increased percentage of cases attributable to progression of latent infection to TB disease in the foreign-born population. Overall, there has been a dramatic decline in the annual TB case count, but the speed of the decline has slowed over the last several years. At the current pace and case count of 2137 in 2015, California will not achieve TB elimination (<1 TB case per one million population) for at least 100 years. There are an estimated 2.1 million persons in California with latent TB infection. Modeling suggests that LTBI detection and treatment are important in reaching TB elimination. For this reason, a coalition of stakeholders in California is exploring novel approaches to accelerate the case decline in order to prevent unnecessary disease and death.Entities:
Keywords: TB elimination; Tuberculosis; Tuberculosis epidemiology in California; Tuberculosis prevention
Year: 2016 PMID: 27218013 PMCID: PMC4846683 DOI: 10.1007/s40471-016-0076-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Epidemiol Rep
Fig. 1Tuberculosis cases and case rates―California, 1930–2015
Characteristics of reported tuberculosis cases in California during 1993–1997 compared with 2010–2014
| 1993–1997 | 2010–2014 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||||
| Characteristic | Number of cases | Percente | Number of cases | Percente |
|
| Age | 42f | (28, 60)g | 51f | (33, 67)g | <0.0001 |
| Age, foreign-born | 42f | (28, 62)g | 54f | (37,69)g | <0.0001 |
| Age, US-born | 41f | (27, 58)g | 39f | (20, 59)g | 0.0040 |
| Children (aged <15 years) | 2120 | (9.2) | 496 | (4.5) | <0.0001 |
| Foreign-born | 14,992 | (65.5) | 8707 | (78.3) | <0.0001 |
| Site of disease | <0.0001 | ||||
| Pulmonary only | 17,324 | (75.4) | 7605 | (68.3) | |
| Pulmonary + extrapulmonary | 1264 | (5.5) | 1171 | (10.5) | |
| Extrapulmonary only | 4382 | (19.1) | 2355 | (21.2) | |
| Cavitary disease (among pulmonary cases) a | 3718 | (20.8) | 1803 | (21.7) | 0.1280 |
| Sputum smear + disease (among pulmonary cases)a | 7392 | (45.7) | 4476 | (54.8) | <0.0001 |
| Not culture-positive (among all cases) | 5670 | (24.7) | 2192 | (19.7) | <0.0001 |
| Medical risk factors for TB | |||||
| HIV infected | 1956 | (8.5) | 454 | (4.1) | <0.0001 |
| Diabetes | d | 2579 | (23.2) | ||
| End-stage renal disease | d | 410 | (3.7) | ||
| TNF-alpha | d | 93 | (0.8) | ||
| Organ Transplant | d | 83 | (0.8) | ||
| Other immunosuppression | d | 668 | (6.0) | ||
| Any medical risk factor (includes HIV) | d | 3671 | (33.0) | ||
| Social risk factors for TB | |||||
| Diagnosed in Corrections | 943 | (4.1) | 349 | (3.1) | <0.0001 |
| Homeless | 1770 | (8.4) | 588 | (5.3) | <0.0001 |
| Drug use | 1775 | (9.6) | 725 | (6.6) | <0.0001 |
| Excessive alcohol use | 2504 | (13.9) | 918 | (8.4) | <0.0001 |
| Healthcare worker | 383 | (1.7) | 419 | (3.8) | <0.0001 |
| US-born healthcare worker | 122 | (0.5) | 70 | (0.6) | |
| Foreign-born healthcare worker | 260 | (1.1) | 349 | (3.1) | |
| Drug resistanceb | <0.0001 | ||||
| Pansusceptible (includes EMB monoresistance) | 14,421 | (87.4) | 7443 | (84.5) | |
| INH monoresistance | 1279 | (7.8) | 716 | (8.1) | |
| Rifampin monoresistance | 101 | (0.6) | 17 | (0.2) | |
| PZA monoresistance | 248 | (1.5) | 445 | (5.1) | |
| Polydrug resistance | 159 | (1.0) | 66 | (0.8) | |
| MDR | 246 | (1.5) | 103 | (1.2) | |
| Pre-XDR | 34 | (0.2) | 15 | (0.2) | |
| XDR | 5 | (0.03) | 4 | (0.1) | |
| Primary provider of TB carec | |||||
| Private sector | 7094 | (32.2) | 2361 | (35.7) | <0.0001 |
| Public TB clinic | 10,853 | (49.2) | 3650 | (55.1) | |
| Both public TB clinic and private sector | 4109 | (18.6) | 610 | (9.2) | |
| Outcome | |||||
| Death before treatment start | 674 | (2.9) | 147 | (2.2) | 0.0005 |
| Among patients alive at diagnosis and started on treatmentc | <0.0001 | ||||
| Death after treatment start | 1828 | (8.3) | 481 | (7.2) | |
| Lost/moved/refused/unknown | 2222 | (10.1) | 389 | (5.9) | |
| Moved outside the USA | 655 | (3.0) | 149 | (2.2) | |
| Treatment complete | 18,050 | (81.7) | 5772 | (86.9) | |
INH isoniazid, RIF rifampin, PZA pyrazinamide, EMB ethambutol, IQR interquartile range, MDR multidrug resistance, defined as resistance to at least INH and RIF, Pre-XDR pre-extensively drug resistant, defined as MDR plus resistance to a fluoroquinolone or a second-line injectable medication (amikacin, capreomycin, or kanamycin); polydrug resistance, defined as resistance to at least two first-line drugs, but not MDR
aDenominator = pulmonary cases with or without extrapulmonary disease
bMutually exclusive categories among cases tested to at least INH and RIF. Includes cases that acquired resistance on treatment
cDenominator = alive at diagnosis and started on treatment. Data in later time period only available for 2010–2012
dOnly available for 2010 and later
eCalculations exclude missing and unknown values from the denominator
f median
ginterquartile range
Years to TB elimination and pre-elimination in California
| Status | Rate | Cases in California |
|---|---|---|
| Current (2015) | 55 cases/million | 2137 |
| Pre-elimination | <10 cases/million | 388a |
| Elimination | <1 case/million | 39a |
aBased on 2014 US Census Estimate of California Population: 38.8 million
Fig. 2Years of TB pre-elimination and elimination in California. Extrapolation based on current rate of decline
Estimated prevalence of TB infection in California, 2014a
| % with LTBI | 2014 population estimate | Number of persons with LTBI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 6.1% | 38,802,500 | 2,380,068 |
| US born (all) | 1.9 % | 27,920,749 | 542,765 |
| White (non-Hispanic/Latino) | 0.7 % | 13,933,084 | 97,532 |
| Black (non-Hispanic/Latino) | 5.1 % | 2,490,359 | 127,008 |
| Hispanic/Latino | 2.9 % | 9,070,625 | 263,048 |
| Asian | 2.4 % | 2,086,289 | 50,071 |
| Other (non-Hispanic/Latino) | 1.5 % | 340,392 | 5,106 |
| Foreign-born (all) | 16.9 % | 10,881,751 | 1,837,303 |
| White (non-Hispanic/Latino) | 9.4 % | 1,619,862 | 152,267 |
| Black (non-Hispanic/Latino) | 15.2 % | 193,964 | 29,483 |
| Hispanic/Latino | 15.6 % | 5,392,958 | 841,301 |
| Asian | 22.3 % | 3,592,700 | 801,172 |
| Other (non-Hispanic/Latino) | 15.9 % | 82,267 | 13,080 |
aBased on National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2011–2012, as reported by Miramontes et al. [16] using tuberculin skin test for US born and interferon gamma release assay for foreign born (population estimate from US Census American Community Survey)