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Exhaled Mycobacterium tuberculosis Predicts Incident Infection in Household Contacts

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posted on 2023-07-07, 09:12 authored by CM Williams, AK Muhammad, B Sambou, A Bojang, A Jobe, GK Daffeh, O Owolabi, D Pan, M Pareek, MR Barer, JS Sutherland, P Haldar
Background: Halting transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) by identifying infectious individuals early is key to eradicating tuberculosis (TB). Here we evaluate face mask sampling as a tool for stratifying the infection risk of individuals with pulmonary TB (PTB) to their household contacts. Methods: Forty-six sputum-positive PTB patients in The Gambia (August 2016-November 2017) consented to mask sampling prior to commencing treatment. Incident Mtb infection was defined in 181 of their 217 household contacts as QuantiFERON conversion or an increase in interferon-γof ≥1 IU/mL, 6 months after index diagnosis. Multilevel mixed-effects logistical regression analysis with cluster adjustment by household was used to identify predictors of incident infection. Results: Mtb was detected in 91% of PTB mask samples with high variation in IS6110 copies (5.3 × 102 to 1.2 × 107). A high mask Mtb level (≥20 000 IS6110 copies) was observed in 45% of cases and was independently associated with increased likelihood of incident Mtb infection in contacts (adjusted odds ratio, 3.20 [95% confidence interval, 1.26-8.12]; P =. 01), compared with cases having low-positive/negative mask Mtb levels. Mask Mtb level was a better predictor of incident Mtb infection than sputum bacillary load, chest radiographic characteristics, or sleeping proximity. Conclusions: Mask sampling offers a sensitive and noninvasive tool to support the stratification of individuals who are most infectious in high-TB-burden settings. Our approach can provide better insight into community transmission in complex environments.

History

Author affiliation

Department of Respiratory Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Clinical Infectious Diseases

Volume

76

Issue

3

Pagination

E957 - E964

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

1058-4838

eissn

1537-6591

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-07-07

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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