| Literature DB >> 35771355 |
Cornelia Feiterna-Sperling1, Janine Thoulass2,3, Renate Krüger4, Walter Haas5, Barbara Hauer5.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) in exposed children can be prevented with timely contact tracing and preventive treatment. This study aimed to identify potential barriers and delays in the prevention of childhood TB in a low-incidence country by assessing the management of children subsequently diagnosed with TB. A pilot retrospective cohort study included children (< 15 years) treated for TB between 2009 and 2016 at a tertiary care hospital in Berlin, Germany. Clinical data on cases and source cases, information on time points of the diagnostic work up, and preventive measures were collected and analyzed. Forty-eight children (median age 3 years [range 0.25-14]) were included; 36 had been identified through contact tracing, the majority (26; 72.2%) being < 5 years. TB source cases were mostly family members, often with advanced disease. Thirty children (83.3%) did not receive prophylactic or preventive treatment, as TB was already prevalent when first presented. Three cases developed TB despite preventive or prophylactic treatment; in three cases (all < 5 years), recommendations had not been followed. Once TB was diagnosed in source cases, referral, assessment, TB diagnosis, and treatment were initiated in most children in a timely manner with a median duration of 18 days (interquartile range 6-60, range 0-252) between diagnosis of source case and child contact (information available for 35/36; 97.2%). In some cases, notable delays in follow-up occurred.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood tuberculosis; Contact tracing; Preventive treatment; Source case
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35771355 PMCID: PMC9395448 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-022-04537-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.860
Fig. 1Key time points used to calculate time intervals in the assessment of source and childhood TB cases
Sociodemographic and disease characteristics of the study population by mode of case finding
| Overall ( | Active case finding ( | Passive case finding ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | % | |||||
| 0.926 | |||||||
Male Female | 26 22 | 54.2 45.8 | 21 18 | 53.9 46.2 | 5 4 | 55.6 44.4 | |
| 0.615 | |||||||
0–4 5–9 10–14 | 31 13 4 | 64.6 27.1 8.3 | 26 10 3 | 66.7 25.6 7.7 | 5 3 1 | 55.6 33.3 11.1 | |
| 0.232 | |||||||
German-born Foreign-born Missing | 28 18 2 | 58.3 37.5 4.2 | 25 13 1 | 64.1 33.3 2.6 | 3 5 1 | 33.3 55.6 11.1 | |
| 0.598 | |||||||
Evidence of BCG vaccination No evidence of BCG vaccination | 9 9 | 50.0 50.0 | 6 7 | 46.2 53.8 | 3 2 | 60.0 40.0 | |
| 0.697 | |||||||
Pulmonary Extrapulmonary | 32 16 | 66.7 33.3 | 25 14* | 64.1 35.9 | 7 2** | 77.8 22.2 | |
| 0.198 | |||||||
None Intrathoracic lymphnodes Other | 40 4 4 | 83.3 8.3 8.3 | 33 4 2 | 84.6 10.3 5.1 | 7 0 2 | 77.8 0 22.2 | |
| 0.0393 | |||||||
None/intrathoracic lymphnodes Other | 43 5 | 89.6 10.4 | 37 2 | 94.9 5.1 | 6 3 | 66.7 33.3 | (Fisher’s exact test) |
| NA | |||||||
Father Mother Sibling Grandparents Other family members Non-family members None identified | 11 7 5 3 4 8 10 | 22.9 14.6 10.4 6.3 8.3 16.7 20.8 | 10 7 5 2 4 8 3 | 25.6 17.9 12.8 5.1 10.3 20.5 7.7 | 1 0 0 1 0 0 7 | 11.1 0.0 0.0 11.1 0.0 0.0 77.8 | |
NA not applicable, BCG Bacillus Calmette-Guérin
*Includes one case of TB meningitis
**Includes one case of miliary TB
Comparison of study cases to all cases notified in Berlin over the study period (2009–2016)
| Charité | Berlin | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | |||
| Gender | ||||
Male Female | 26 22 | 54.2 45.8 | 64 37 | 63.4 36.6 |
| Age | ||||
0–4 5–9 10–14 | 31 13 4 | 64.6 27.1 8.3 | 53 27 21 | 52.5 26.7 20.8 |
| Place of birth | ||||
German-born Foreign-born Missing | 28 18 2 | 58.3 37.5 4.2 | 55 46 | 54.5 45.5 |
| Method of case finding | ||||
Contact tracing Screening Passive case finding Other Missing | 36 3 9 0 0 | 75.0 6.3 18.8 0 0 | 63 7 25 5 1 | 62.4 6.9 24.8 5.0 1.0 |
| Primary disease site | ||||
Pulmonary Intrathoracic lymphnodes Extrapulmonary | 32 15 1 | 66.7 31.3 2.1 | 84 10 7 | 83.2 9.9 6.9 |
Fig. 2Key intervals in the assessment of childhood TB cases identified through contact tracing (N = 36)