Identifying children with tuberculosis among household contacts in The Gambia.
Egere, U;
Togun, T;
Sillah, A;
Mendy, F;
Otu, J;
Hoelscher, M;
Heinrich, N;
Hill, PC;
Kampmann, B;
(2017)
Identifying children with tuberculosis among household contacts in The Gambia.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TUBERCULOSIS AND LUNG DISEASE, 21 (1).
pp. 46-52.
ISSN 1027-3719
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5588/ijtld.16.0289
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SETTING: Greater Banjul Area of the Gambia. OBJECTIVES: To identify co-prevalent tuberculosis (TB) among child contacts of adults with smear-positive TB. DESIGN: Child contacts aged <15 years in the immediate household and compound were prospectively enrolled and evaluated for TB disease using screening questionnaires and the tuberculin skin test (TST). Symptomatic and/or TST-positive (10 mm) contacts were further investigated. RESULTS: Of 4042 child contacts who underwent symptom screening and TST, 3339 (82.6%) were diagnosed as TB-exposed but not infected, 639 (15.8%) were latently infected and 64 (1.6%) had co-prevalent TB. Of the 64 TB cases, 50 (78.1%) were from within the immediate household of the index case, and 14 (21.9%) from within the same compound. Of the 27 asymptomatic but TST-positive children diagnosed with TB, 7 were microbiologically confirmed. The median age of the TB cases was 4.4 years (interquartile range 1.9-6.9); 53.1% were aged <5 years. Of the 4042 child contacts, 206 (5%) slept in the same bed as the index case; 28.1% of all TB cases occurred in this group. Symptom screening alone would have detected only 57.8% of the co-prevalent cases. CONCLUSION: In our community setting, if contact tracing is restricted to symptom screening and immediate households only, nearly half of all co-prevalent TB disease in child contacts would be missed.