A priori, we planned to measure the prevalence of tuberculosis infection in children born in 2012, the year before the active case-finding intervention commenced, as a co-primary endpoint. This investigation did not reveal any significant difference between the groups in the prevalence of tuberculosis infection. However, the prevalence of tuberculosis infection (2·6% in the control group) was lower than anticipated. Therefore, we did, during 2018, a further post-hoc survey of older children, born between 2004 and 2011.
The post-hoc survey revealed a substantial beneficial effect of the intervention on the prevalence of tuberculosis infection (8·3% in the control group vs 4·1% in the intervention group, prevalence ratio 0·50 [95% CI 0·32–0·78]; appendix). We acknowledge that, as a post-hoc finding, this needs to be replicated in further cluster-randomised controlled trials. Nevertheless, it remains the only evidence from a randomised comparison of active case-finding versus the usual care. Furthermore, the method and analysis were prespecified. It might be some time before further high-quality evidence is available; in the meantime, these data tend to refute the hypothesis that mass active case-finding detects “people with relatively stable disease who survive for many years; if they are less contagious, active case-finding will have little effect on transmission”.2Ortiz-Brizuela E Menzies D Tuberculosis active case-finding: looking for cases in all the right places?. Further long-term studies of active case-finding are required.We declare no competing interests.
Supplementary MaterialReferences1.Burke RM Nliwasa M Feasey HRA et al.Community-based active case-finding interventions for tuberculosis: a systematic review.
Lancet Public Health. 6: e283-e2992.Ortiz-Brizuela E Menzies DTuberculosis active case-finding: looking for cases in all the right places?.
Lancet Public Health. 6: e261-e2623.Marks GB Nguyen NV Nguyen PTB et al.Community-wide screening for tuberculosis in a high-prevalence setting.
N Engl J Med. 381: 1347-1357Article InfoPublication HistoryIdentificationDOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(21)00130-4
Copyright© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.
User License Creative Commons Attribution – NonCommercial – NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) | How you can reuseCommunity-based active case-finding for tuberculosis might be effective in changing tuberculosis epidemiology and thereby improving population health if delivered with high coverage and intensity. If possible, active case-finding projects should incorporate a well designed, robust evaluation to contribute to the evidence base and help elucidate which delivery methods and diagnostic strategies are most effective.
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