| Literature DB >> 31723700 |
Gerard de Vries1,2, Rob van Hest3,4, Marleen Bakker5, Connie Erkens1, Susan van den Hof1,6, Wieneke Meijer7, Karen Oud8, Erika Slump2, Jaap van Dissel2.
Abstract
Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) screening and preventive treatment is one of the components of the World Health Organization (WHO) End TB strategy, and particularly relevant for low tuberculosis (TB) incidence countries, i.e. less than 100 TB cases per million population. The Netherlands is such a low-incidence country with traditionally a strong emphasis on programmatic management of LTBI, e.g. examining contacts of infectious TB patients by the public health services. Increasingly, curative services are involved in LTBI management of clinical risk groups. The country recently adopted a five-year strategic national plan recommending LTBI screening of high-risk migrants populations. A monitoring and evaluation system is already in place to measure programme performance and guide policy. Research on LTBI screening of migrants is on-going and results should inform future decisions in scaling-up this intervention. Several challenges remain for programmatic LTBI management, such as securing financial resources and the right professional cadre for implementation; availability of screening tests and drugs; collecting additional data for monitoring and evaluation, in line with the WHO indicators for LTBI programmatic management; developing cultural-sensitive and client-centred education for migrants; reducing patient costs for LTBI screening and preventive treatment; and assessing cost-effectiveness and impact on TB epidemiology.Entities:
Keywords: Elimination; Latent tuberculosis infection; MPHS Municipal Public Health Service; Prevention; Screening; Tuberculosis
Year: 2017 PMID: 31723700 PMCID: PMC6850226 DOI: 10.1016/j.jctube.2017.02.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Tuberc Other Mycobact Dis ISSN: 2405-5794
Fig. 1Tuberculosis (TB) notification rate in countries with a WHO estimated TB incidence <10/100,000, (only countries with population >300,000), 2015.
Fig. 2Coverage of Municipal Public Health Services in The Netherlands.
Fig. 3Number and rate of tuberculosis notification, The Netherlands, 1975–2015.
Latent tuberculosis infection indicators in The Netherlands, 2015.
| Target group for LTBI screening in the Netherlands | Number eligible for LTBI screening | Number screened for LTBI | Screening coverage | Number LTBI cases diagnosed and reported to NTR | Number cases that initiated LTBI treatment | LTBI treatment coverage | Number completed LTBI treatment (2014) | LTBI completion rate (2014) | Number with active TB reported to NTR | TB incidence among target group (per 100,000) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All contacts of TB patients | * | * | 867 | 679 | 78% | 505/575 | 88% | 65 | ||
| People living with HIV | 865 | Unknown | – | 3 | 3 | 100% | 4/4 | 100% | 36 | |
| Patients initiating / on TNF-alpha blocking treatment | Unknown | Unknown | – | 192 | 177** | 92% | 151/169** | 89% | 14 | |
| Patients preparing for (or with) organ or hematologic transplantation | Unknown | Unknown | – | 5 | ||||||
| Health care workers | Unknown | Unknown | – | 21 | 17 | 81% | 27/29 | 93% | 6 | |
| Travelers | Unknown | Unknown | – | 22 | 18 | 82% | 20/20 | 100% | ||
| Others | Unknown | Unknown | – | 328 | 234 | 79% | 194/216 | 90% | ||
| Unknown | Unknown |
Note: There is no policy in the Netherlands to screen patients with renal insufficiency/ dialysis or with silicosis for LTBI.
LTBI: latent tuberculosis infection; NTR: Netherlands Tuberculosis Register; TB: tuberculosis.
Data is available of the number of contacts eligible for TB examination in source tracing and contact investigation (n= 7162) related to a TB patient diagnosed in 2014, the number of contacts actually screened for LTBI (n= 5446) and the screening coverage (76%). The dataset allows a breakdown in intensity of contacts, i.e. household and close contacts, but not (yet) for age group, such as children.
LTBI screening data in the NTR has been combined for patients initiating TNF-alpha blocking therapy and preparing for transplantation.
Others: mainly pre-employment, pre-travel and other low-risk LTBI screening.
Estimated number of newly diagnosed patients with HIV in 2015 in the Netherlands [55]. Immigrants from TB high-incidence countries and HIV patients at increased risk for TB due to travel or other exposure (contacts of TB patients) are prioritised in the Netherlands for LTBI screeing [56].
Contacts screened for and diagnosed with latent tuberculosis infection in contact investigations in The Netherlands, 2006–2010.
| Smear-positive pulmonary PTB | Smear-negative culture-positive pulmonary PTB | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number screened for LTBI (n) | Number with LTBI (n) | Proportion infected (%) | Number screened for LTBI (n) | Number with LTBI (n) | Proportion infected (%) | |
| 1st Ring | 10,108 | 1359 | 13.4 | 2512 | 184 | 7.3 |
| 2nd Ring | 14,651 | 878 | 6.0 | 2523 | 114 | 4.5 |
| 3rd Ring | 11,233 | 350 | 3.1 | 918 | 33 | 3.6 |
| Total | 35,992 | 2587 | 7.2 | 5954 | 331 | 5.6 |
LTBI = latent tuberculosis infection; PTB = pulmonary tuberculosis.