| Literature DB >> 30882302 |
Jonathon R Campbell, James C Johnston, Victoria J Cook, Mohsen Sadatsafavi, R Kevin Elwood, Fawziah Marra.
Abstract
Prospective migrants to countries where the incidence of tuberculosis (TB) is low (low-incidence countries) receive TB screening; however, screening for latent TB infection (LTBI) before immigration is rare. We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of mandated and sponsored preimmigration LTBI screening for migrants to low-incidence countries. We used discrete event simulation to model preimmigration LTBI screening coupled with postarrival follow-up and treatment for those who test positive. Preimmigration interferon-gamma release assay screening and postarrival rifampin treatment was preferred in deterministic analysis. We calculated cost per quality-adjusted life-year gained for migrants from countries with different TB incidences. Our analysis provides evidence of the cost-effectiveness of preimmigration LTBI screening for migrants to low-incidence countries. Coupled with research on sustainability, acceptability, and program implementation, these results can inform policy decisions.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; bacteria; cost-effectiveness analysis; cost–utility analysis; immigration; interferon gamma release tests; latent tuberculosis infection; mass screening; migrants; tuberculin test; tuberculosis; tuberculosis and other mycobacteria
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30882302 PMCID: PMC6433018 DOI: 10.3201/eid2504.171630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Intervention strategies for screening and treatment of latent TB infection in immigrants*
| Intervention strategy | Preimmigration | Postarrival if test is positive |
|---|---|---|
| Base case | TB screening as part of routine preimmigration medical exams, consisting of a chest radiograph, medical history, and symptom screen. If diagnosed with TB, treatment must be completed before immigrating. | Routine follow-up of those with abnormal chest radiograph results or previous TB. |
| TST/INH | In addition to the base case, a TST is performed at the time of the medical exam. If the result is positive (induration | Recommendation for follow-up; if patient reports for follow-up, 9-month course of INH. |
| TST/RIF | Same as above. | Recommendation for follow-up; at follow-up, 4-month course of RIF. |
| IGRA/INH | In addition to the base case, an IGRA is placed at the time of the medical exam. If the result is positive (as defined by the manufacturer) referral is made for follow-up postarrival. If the IGRA result is negative, no further action is taken. If the IGRA result is indeterminate, a second is performed; a second consecutive indeterminate is treated as a negative. | Recommendation for follow-up; if patient reports for follow-up, 9-month course of INH. |
| IGRA/RIF | Same as above. | Recommendation for follow-up; if patient reports for follow-up, 4-month course of RIF. |
| SEQ/INH | In addition to the base case, a TST is placed at the time of the medical exam. If the result is positive (as defined by an induration | Recommendation for follow-up; at follow-up, 9-month course of INH. |
| SEQ/RIF | Same as above. | Recommendation for follow-up; at follow-up, 4-month course of RIF. |
*No intervention required for migrants with negative results of base case screening. IGRA, interferon-gamma release assay; INH, isoniazid; RIF, rifampin; SEQ, sequential screening; TB, tuberculosis TST, tuberculin skin test.
Figure 1Flow structure of model used for cost-effectiveness analysis of screening and interventions of migrants for TB and LTBI. LTBI, latent tuberculosis infection; TB, tuberculosis.
Model parameter estimates and values used for sensitivity analyses of intervention strategies for screening and treatment of latent TB infection in immigrants*
| Parameter |
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screening parameters | ||||
| TST sensitivity | 0.782 | 0.69–0.87 | Beta(43,12) | ( |
| TST specificity, no BCG | 0.974 | 0.963–0.982 | Beta(770,21) | ( |
| TST specificity, BCG | 0.602 | 0.561–0.642 | Beta(239,158) | ( |
| IGRA sensitivity | 0.889 | 0.688–0.993 | Beta(8,1) | ( |
| IGRA specificity | 0.957 | 0.946–0.968 | Beta(900,40) | ( |
| IGRA indeterminate† | 0.06 | 0.05–0.07 | Beta(83,1286) | ( |
| Complete TST‡ | 1 | Fixed | Fixed | |
| Complete medical evaluation§ | 1 | Fixed | Fixed |
|
| Population characteristics¶ | ||||
| LTBI prevalence | ||||
| Very high incidence | 0.3162 | 0.2686–0.3880 | Varied with reactivation rate | ( |
| High incidence | 0.2016 | 0.1706–0.2464 | Varied with reactivation rate | ( |
| Moderate incidence | 0.0902 | 0.0763–0.1102 | Varied with reactivation rate | ( |
| Low incidence | 0.0159 | 0.0135–0.0195 | Varied with reactivation rate | ( |
| Abnormal chest radiograph results or previous TB | ||||
| Very high incidence | 0.039 | Fixed | Fixed | ( |
| High incidence | 0.028 | Fixed | Fixed | ( |
| Moderate incidence | 0.029 | Fixed | Fixed | ( |
| Low incidence | 0.008 | Fixed | Fixed | ( |
| Adherence to postarrival follow-up# | 0.684 | 0.646–0.721 | Beta(404.50,186.87) | ( |
| Treatment parameters | ||||
| Initiate** | 0.938 | 0.907–0.964 | Beta(180.83,11.95) | ( |
| Complete, INH | 0.616 | 0.561–0.670 | Beta(131.66,82.07) | ( |
| Complete, RIF | 0.814 | 0.745–0.876 | Beta(76.85,17.56) | ( |
| Adverse event, INH | 0.049 | 0.044–0.055 | Beta(249,4789) | ( |
| Adverse event, RIF | 0.021 | 0.018–0.025 | Beta(109,4877) | ( |
| Adverse event hospitalization | 0.01 | 0.0005–0.03 | Beta(1,99) | ( |
| Death, INH | 0.00000988 | 0–0.00002 | Beta(2,202495) | ( |
| LTBI risk reduction, INH | 0.90 | 0.78–0.95 | Normal(−2.3,0.5)†† | ( |
| LTBI risk reduction, RIF | 0.90 | 0.63–0.97 | Normal(−2.3,0.8)†† | ( |
| Partial risk reduction, INH | 0.346 | 0.267–0.490 | Combination of normal distributions††, ‡‡ | Expert opinion, ( |
| Partial risk reduction, RIF | 0.30 | 0.17–0.40 | Normal(−0.35,0.1)†† | Expert opinion, ( |
| Adverse event duration | 7 d | 0–24 | Gamma(0.7,10) | Expert opinion, ( |
| TB parameters | ||||
| Death from TB | 0.0476 | 0.0391–0.0566 | Beta(76,1523) | ( |
| Reactivation rate | 0.0011 | 0.0009–0.0013 | Beta(90.92,82545.55) | ( |
| Abnormal CXR risk change | 3.9 | 3.0–4.9 | Normal(1.36,0.15)†† | ( |
| Extended therapy | 0.124 | 0.029–0.264 | Beta(2.366,16.713) | Expert opinion, ( |
| Relapse rate | 0.0359 | 0.0197–0.0654 | Normal(−3.327,0.365)†† | ( |
| Hospitalization duration | 17 d | Fixed | Fixed | Expert opinion, ( |
| Model parameters | ||||
| BCG vaccination, <30 cases | 0.605 | 0.60–0.61 | Beta(45137,29502) | ( |
| BCG vaccination, ≥30 cases | 0.998 | 0.997–0.999 | Beta(185381,384) | ( |
| BCG vaccination uptake | 0.837 | Fixed | Fixed | ( |
| Discount rate | 0.03 | Fixed | Fixed | ( |
| Time horizon | 25 y | Fixed | Fixed | NA |
*AE, adverse event; BCG, bacillus Calmette-Guérin; IGRA, interferon-gamma release assay; INH, isoniazid; LTBI, latent tuberculosis infection; NA, not available; PSA, probabilistic sensitivity analysis; RIF, rifampin; TST, tuberculin skin test; TB, tuberculosis. †Treated as a negative result if it occurred; was equally likely to occur in those with and without LTBI. ‡Without being mandatory, this value is 63.5% (imputed from 43.4% completing screening when 68.4% adhere with a follow-up appointment) (5). §Without being mandatory, this value is 78% (imputed from 43.7 of 56 individuals completing medical evaluation) (5). ¶Very high incidence, >200 cases/100,000; high incidence, >100 and <200 cases/100,000; moderate incidence, >30 and <100 cases/100,000; low incidence, <30 cases/100,000. #From a meta-analysis (22); see also Appendix (https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/EID/article/25/4/17-1630-App1.pdf). **This model assumes all who report postarrival due to a positive preimmigration LTBI diagnostic test are offered treatment. Exploratory analysis adjusts this assumption so that only the number who would complete TST screening begin treatment. ††Results from this distribution are exponentiated. ‡‡Formula: 0.33 × (Normal(−1.168,0.228)) + 0.374 × (Normal(−0.381,0.169)) + 0.293 × 1.
Cost and QALY estimates and values used for sensitivity analysis of intervention strategies for screening and treatment of latent TB infection in immigrants*
| Parameter |
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Costs | ||||
| Full INH treatment | 992 | 804–1179 | Triangular, 804–1179 | BCCDC, ( |
| Drug costs | 181 | |||
| Nurse and clinician costs | 741 | |||
| Follow-up chest radiograph | 42 | |||
| Routine tests | 28 | |||
| Full RIF treatment | 575 | 464–686 | Triangular, 464–686 | BCCDC, ( |
| Drug costs | 98 | |||
| Nurse and clinician costs | 421 | |||
| Follow-up chest radiograph | 42 | |||
| Routine tests | 14 | |||
| Partial INH | 462 | 174–804 | Triangular, 174–804 | BCCDC, ( |
| Partial RIF | 319 | 178–464 | Triangular, 178–464 | BCCDC, ( |
| Complete TST | 31 | 24–38 | Triangular, 24–38 | BCCDC, ( |
| TST cost | 11 | |||
| Nurse costs (2 visits) | 20 | |||
| Incomplete TST | 21 | 17–25 | Triangular, 17–25 | BCCDC, ( |
| IGRA | 54 | 31–62 | Triangular, 31–62 | BCCDC, ( |
| Kit and technician cost | 47 | |||
| Nurse costs | 7 | |||
| Chest radiograph | 42 | 32–52 | Triangular, 32–52 | BCCDC, ( |
| Cost per radiograph | 35 | |||
| Nurse costs | 7 | |||
| TB | 20,532 | 7141–39,525 | Gamma(4.1064,5,000) | Expert opinion, ( |
| LTBI adverse event | 732 | 549–916 | Triangular, 549–916 | ( |
| Hospitalization | 6,641 | 5305–9985 | Triangular, 5,305–9,985 | ( |
| Death | 26,933 | 13,079–40,788 | Triangular, 13,079–40,788 | ( |
| QALYs | ||||
| LTBI | 0.81 | Assumed | ( | |
| Healthy | 0.81 | 0.58–0.97 | Beta(7.85,1.84) | ( |
| Adverse event disutility | 0.2 | 0.15–0.25 | Triangular, ±25% | ( |
| TB | 0.69 | 0.08–0.24† | Beta(9,51) | ( |
| Hospitalization | 0.5 | 0.28–0.51† | Beta(19.5,30.5) | ( |
| Death | 0 | Fixed | Fixed | Standard |
*All costs are in 2016 Can $. BCCDC, British Columbia Centre for Disease Control; IGRA, interferon-gamma release assay; INH, isoniazid; LTBI, latent tuberculosis infection; PSA, probabilistic sensitivity analysis; RIF, rifampin; TB, tuberculosis; TST, tuberculin skin test. †Sampled as a percent decrement compared to healthy QALY.
Results in various TB incidence settings of implementing intervention strategies for screening and treatment of latent TB infection in immigrants*
| Intervention | % Identified for post-arrival followup | Cost/1,000 persons, $ | No. QALYs/1,000 persons | No. TB cases/1,000 persons | % Reduction in TB incidence | Cost per QALY gained, $ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low TB incidence countries | |||||||
| Base case | 0.82 | 9,681 | 13,761.03 | 0.41 | NC | NC | |
| SEQ/RIF | 4.02 | 60,996 | 13,761.30 | 0.26 | 36.87 | 191,889 | |
| SEQ/INH | 4.02 | 67,309 | 13,761.08 | 0.28 | 32.00 | 1,289,335‡ | |
| IGRA/RIF | 6.43 | 80,107 | 13,761.22 | 0.22 | 46.16 | 373,773‡ | |
| IGRA/INH | 6.43 | 91,056 | 13,761.07 | 0.25 | 39.07 | 2,315,425‡ | |
| TST/RIF | 22.99 | 120,910 | 13,760.65 | 0.24 | 40.08 | Dominated | |
| TST/INH |
| 22.99 | 162,233 | 13,760.59 | 0.27 | 34.12 | Dominated |
| Moderate TB incidence countries | |||||||
| Base case | 2.88 | 58,301 | 13,735.03 | 2.47 | NC | NC | |
| SEQ/RIF | 11.99 | 121,950 | 13,736.36 | 1.57 | 36.52 | 47,561 | |
| IGRA/RIF | 14.52 | 129,036 | 13,736.66 | 1.33 | 46.36 | 43,343 | |
| SEQ/INH | 11.99 | 142,739 | 13,735.71 | 1.72 | 30.55 | 122,821‡ | |
| IGRA/INH | 14.52 | 154,804 | 13,736.69 | 1.50 | 39.47 | 58,154‡ | |
| TST/RIF | 38.96 | 206,145 | 13,736.84 | 1.46 | 40.77 | 81,548‡ | |
| TST/INH |
| 38.96 | 277,998 | 13,735.98 | 1.61 | 34.88 | 230,641‡ |
| High TB incidence countries | |||||||
| Base case | 2.79 | 122,928 | 13,702.56 | 5.39 | NC | NC | |
| SEQ/RIF | 19.13 | 194,289 | 13,704.93 | 3.44 | 36.06 | 29,997 | |
| IGRA/RIF | 23.60 | 199,878 | 13,705.48 | 2.91 | 45.99 | 26,350 | |
| SEQ/INH | 19.13 | 231,835 | 13,704.38 | 3.73 | 30.73 | 59,655‡ | |
| TST/RIF | 44.24 | 247,488 | 13,704.35 | 3.28 | 39.21 | 69,421‡ | |
| IGRA/INH | 23.60 | 263,572 | 13,704.93 | 3.22 | 40.18 | 59,154‡ | |
| TST/INH |
| 44.24 | 348,686 | 13,704.15 | 3.54 | 34.36 | 141,336‡ |
| Very high TB incidence countries | |||||||
| Base case | 3.87 | 184,357 | 13,666.32 | 8.12 | NC | NC | |
| SEQ/RIF | 27.45 | 263,628 | 13,670.25 | 5.18 | 36.23 | 20,165 | |
| IGRA/RIF | 33.86 | 268,840 | 13,671.50 | 4.41 | 45.61 | 16,291 | |
| TST/RIF | 49.82 | 318,025 | 13,670.32 | 5.62 | 30.76 | 33,403‡ | |
| SEQ/INH | 27.45 | 318,435 | 13,671.23 | 4.86 | 40.16 | 27,296‡ | |
| IGRA/INH | 33.86 | 337,716 | 13,671.02 | 4.97 | 38.82 | 32,657‡ | |
| TST/INH | 49.82 | 415,877 | 13,669.91 | 5.33 | 34.34 | 64,494‡ | |
*Very high incidence, >200 cases per 100,000; high incidence: >100 and <200 cases/100,000; moderate incidence, >30 and <100 cases/100,000; low incidence: <30 cases/100,000. IGRA, interferon-gamma release assay; INH, isoniazid; NC, not calculable; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; RIF, rifampin; SEQ, sequential screening; TB, tuberculosis; TST, tuberculin skin test. †*The cost per QALY gained is calculated in comparison to the base case. Dominated indicates that an intervention strategy has higher costs and worse outcomes compared to the base case. Costs are in CAD. ‡This intervention strategy is strictly dominated by another intervention strategy. It is more expensive and has worse outcomes.
Figure 2Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves of the base case of no intervention compared with intervention strategies in evaluation of screening and treatment of latent tuberculosis infection in immigrants. The graphs demonstrate the probability an option is more cost-effective at various willingness-to-pay thresholds per quality adjusted life year gained. A) Comparison of the base case with the intervention strategy of preimmigration SEQ screening coupled with postarrival RIF treatment among migrants from low-incidence countries. B) Comparison of the base case with the intervention strategy of preimmigration IGRA screening coupled with postarrival rifampin treatment among migrants from moderate-incidence countries. C) Comparison of the base case with the intervention strategy of preimmigration IGRA screening coupled with postarrival RIF treatment among migrants from high-incidence countries. D) Comparison of the base case with the intervention strategy of preimmigration IGRA screening coupled with postarrival RIF treatment among migrants from very high–incidence countries. IGRA, interferon-gamma release assay; RIF, rifampin; SEQ, sequential.