Epidemiology of tuberculosis in children in London, 2009-2011: are opportunities for prevention being missed?

O Le Polain de Waroux, D Pedrazzoli, D Shingadia, N Q Verlander, S Jama, L Altass, H Maguire
Author Information
  1. O Le Polain de Waroux: Health Protection Agency, London Region Epidemiology Unit, London, UK; European Programme for Intervention Epidemiology Training, European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Stockholm, Sweden.

Abstract

SETTING: London, United Kingdom.
OBJECTIVE: To explore missed opportunities (MO) for the prevention of tuberculosis (TB) in children aged 0-15 years.
DESIGN: Parents/guardians of children aged <15 years diagnosed with TB and reported through surveillance were interviewed about bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccination (MO-V) or contact tracing and screening for TB (MO-C) via an algorithm reflecting eligibility.
RESULTS: Annual TB incidence was 12 per 100,000 (65/100,000 in Black Africans, 20/100,000 in Indian or Pakistani children). The response rate was 36% (145/405). About 20% of UK-born children had not been vaccinated. MO-V was not associated with any particular factor. Contact with a known TB case before illness had occurred in 71 children (49%; 71% in those aged 0-1 years vs. 30% in those aged 11-15 years), of whom 64 (91%) were diagnosed through contact tracing. MO-C had been conducted in six (4% overall). Children with MO-C were all of Black ethnic origin. Their index cases were family members (within their household) or relatives or family friends from abroad (outside their household). MO-C was not associated with any other factor.
CONCLUSION: Although overall few missed opportunities for prevention had occurred, we recommend increased rigour when performing contact tracing in any case where a child may have been exposed.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Age Factors
Asian People
BCG Vaccine
Black People
Child
Child Health Services
Child, Preschool
Contact Tracing
Epidemics
Family Characteristics
Female
Humans
Immunization Programs
Incidence
India
Infant
Infant, Newborn
London
Male
Pakistan
Residence Characteristics
Retrospective Studies
Socioeconomic Factors
Time Factors
Tuberculosis
White People

Chemicals

BCG Vaccine

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0childrenTBagedyearsMO-Copportunitiespreventioncontacttracing000LondonmissedtuberculosisdiagnosedMO-VBlackassociatedfactorcaseoccurredoverallfamilyhouseholdSETTING:UnitedKingdomOBJECTIVE:exploreMO0-15DESIGN:Parents/guardians<15reportedsurveillanceinterviewedbacilleCalmette-GuérinvaccinationscreeningviaalgorithmreflectingeligibilityRESULTS:Annualincidence12per10065/100Africans20/100IndianPakistaniresponserate36%145/40520%UK-bornvaccinatedparticularContactknownillness7149%71%0-1vs30%11-156491%conductedsix4%ChildrenethnicoriginindexcasesmemberswithinrelativesfriendsabroadoutsideCONCLUSION:AlthoughrecommendincreasedrigourperformingchildmayexposedEpidemiology2009-2011:missed?

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