Continuous and bimonthly publication
ISSN (on-line): 1806-3756

Licença Creative Commons
5867
Views
Back to summary
Open Access Peer-Reviewed
Comunicação Breve

Control measures to trace ≤ 15-year-old contacts of index cases of active pulmonary tuberculosis

Medidas de controle dispensadas a contatos ≤ 15 anos de casos índices com tuberculose pulmonar ativa

Cláudia Di Lorenzo Oliveira1, Angelita Cristine de Melo2, Lílian Ruth Silva de Oliveira3, Emerson Lopes Froede1, Paulo Camargos3

ABSTRACT

This was descriptive study carried out in a medium-sized Brazilian city. In ≤ 15-year-old contacts of index cases of active pulmonary tuberculosis, we assessed compliance with the Brazilian national guidelines for tuberculosis control. We interviewed 43 contacts and their legal guardians. Approximately 80% of the contacts were not assessed by the municipal public health care system, and only 21% underwent tuberculin skin testing. The results obtained with the Chi-square Automatic Interaction Detector method suggest that health care teams have a biased attitude toward assessing such contacts and underscore the need for training health professionals regarding tuberculosis control programs.

Keywords: Tuberculosis, pulmonary\epidemiology, Tuberculosis, pulmonary\prevention and control; Contact tracing.

RESUMO

Estudo descritivo realizado em uma cidade de médio porte no Brasil. Em contatos ≤ 15 anos de casos índices de tuberculose pulmonar ativa, avaliamos o cumprimento das etapas do manual de recomendações para o controle da tuberculose no Brasil. Foram entrevistados 43 contatos e seus responsáveis legais. Aproximadamente 80% deles não foram avaliados pelo sistema de saúde pública municipal e apenas 21% realizaram a prova tuberculínica. Os resultados obtidos pelo método Chi-square Automatic Interaction Detector sugerem que as equipes de saúde têm uma postura tendenciosa quanto à avaliação desses contatos e ressaltam a necessidade de capacitação desses profissionais na adequada abordagem dos contatos no âmbito de programas de controle da tuberculose.

Palavras-chave: Tuberculose pulmonar\epidemiologia; Tuberculose pulmonar\prevenção & controle; Busca de comunicante.

Assessment of contacts is one of the essential steps in tuberculosis control programs, and its purpose is to diagnose or rule out latent infection or active tuberculosis in such individuals.(1)

In Brazil, activities that health care facilities should employ to assess contacts are described in the Brazilian National Ministry of Health guidelines for tuberculosis control.(1) In those guidelines, this assessment involves five steps, namely invitation for contacts to come to the health care facility for assessment, interview by the health care team, tuberculin skin testing, chest X-ray, and, when necessary, prescription of treatment for latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) or, if appropri-ate, for active tuberculosis.(1)

Despite the strategic importance of such measures, compliance rates are low (up to approximately 60%) in Brazil,(2,3) whereas, in developed countries, the aforementioned surveillance and control measures reach approximately 90% of individuals.(4)

The objective of the present study was to assess compliance with the steps applicable to ≤ 15-year-old contacts of index cases of active pulmonary tuberculosis.

This was a descriptive study carried out in a medium-sized city in the central-western portion of the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais. Minas Gerais is the second most populous Brazilian state, as well as being the third most important eco-nomically; the city under study serves as a regional hub for health care for 55 cities and had, between 2007 and 2010, an average resident population of 213,501.(5)

The inclusion criteria for contacts were as follows: being ≤ 15 years of age; living in the city under study; and being a contact of a case of active tuberculosis reported between January of 2007 and December of 2010, according to the Brazili-an Case Registry Database. The index cases were located by means of the addresses available on the tuberculosis re-porting and investigation forms that feed the database.

Data on contacts were collected in December of 2010 by administering a structured coding instrument, at a home visit; by determining, through a review of the municipal health information system, over a period of up to two years after the index cases had been reported, whether or not tuberculin skin testing and chest X-ray were performed; and by assessing prescription of and adherence to treatment for LTBI, through a review of dispensing records for isoniazid.

The statistical analysis included descriptive tests and bivariate and multivariate analyses in which the response variable was compliance or noncompliance with the steps in the assessment of contacts, as determined by the Chi-square Automat-ic Interaction Detector (CHAID) algorithm,(6) with cross-validation of results of 10 subsamples, a maximum of 10 nodes, and 5 cases in the child node. Pearson's chi-square test with Bonferroni's adjustment was used for between-node separa-tion. Explanatory variables were degree of contact and family relationship between contacts and the index case, gender, number of rooms in the index case's house, and number of residents in the household. For the analysis of the second step (interview by the health care team), we included, in addition to the aforementioned variables, home visits (yes/no) and invitation for contacts to come to the health care facility.

The research project and its written informed consent form were submitted to and approved by the Human Research Eth-ics Committee of the Hospital São João de Deus-the only such committee in the city at the time the study was conducted- Protocol no. 63/2011.

Between January of 2007 and December of 2010, 135 cases of tuberculosis were reported, of which 54 (40%) consisted of patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis and who therefore were eligible for the study. We excluded 11 patients (20.4%) because there was no record of their addresses, 18 (34.2%) because they did not meet the inclusion criteria-13 (24.0%) because they had no ≤ 15-year-old contacts at the time of diagnosis and 5 (9.2%) because they lived in other cities-and 2 (3.7%) because they declined to participate in the study. There thus remained 21 index cases (38.9%), who were revisited between July of 2011 and February of 2013 and through whom 43 contacts who met the inclusion criteria were identified.

Table 1 presents the general characteristics of the study population.



Of the 43 contacts, all had received BCG vaccination, 22 (51.2%) were male, 40 (93.0%) lived with five or more persons in the household, 25 (58.1%) had frequent contact with the index case, and 25 (58.1%) reported a family income of up to two times the national minimum wage.

Figure 1 contains the decision tree for the first three steps in the assessment of contacts. In it, the lack of invitation for contacts to come to the health care facility (in 44.2%; Figure 1A) is of note, as are the lack of interview by the health care team (in 65.1%; Figure 1B) and the lack of tuberculin skin testing (in 79.1%; Figure 1C). In addition, invitation for contacts to come to the health care facility was found to be associated only with number of rooms in the house (a proxy for socio-economic status), the invitation being made mostly to those living in houses with fewer rooms (76.9%; Figure 1A). No statistical significance was found for either degree of contact or type of health care facility where care was provided.



Whether an interview would be conducted with contacts and their families was determined by contacts having been in-structed to come to the health care facility and by duration of contact. Only 24 contacts (55.8%; Figure 1A) were invited to come to the health care facility, whereas, among these, the attendance rate was 62.5%.

The most significant variable (p < 0.0001) in determining whether a contact would undergo tuberculin skin testing was medical assessment, i.e., 77.8% of those who were assessed by a physician underwent such testing, which denotes that assessment of contacts was centered on only one professional. In cases in which the contact was not assessed by a physi-cian, the second explanatory variable was interview by the health care team (Figure 1B).

The last two steps in the assessment of contacts were not included in the decision tree because they were not performed for all contacts; they are recommended based on the results obtained in the previous assessment step, i.e., whether a contact will undergo chest X-ray is dependent on tuberculin skin testing results, and whether a contact will receive treat-ment for LTBI or active tuberculosis is dependent both on chest X-ray findings and tuberculin skin testing results.

Treatment for LTBI should have been recommended to at least 2 of the contacts; however, only 1 of them (2.3%) re-ceived such treatment and for only about 30 days.

Our review of the literature found no studies on assessment of contacts in which the CHAID method was used, this method being a strategy for statistical analysis that allows the identification of critical points in each step in the investiga-tion of such individuals.

As shown in the present study, assessment of contacts revealed that compliance rates were lower than desirable. A study conducted in the state of Mato Grosso, Brazil, reported that 60.5% of the contacts younger than 15 years were inves-tigated, and that the proportion of contacts investigated was 40.0% higher among those exposed to active cases, being higher than that found in the present study.(3) In the city of São José do Rio Preto, Brazil, 63.1% of the contacts were as-sessed by the municipal health care system in 2002.(2) Nearly the reverse of this situation is found in developed countries; there, the proportion of contacts who are investigated ranges from 80% to 90%, as is the case in the USA and in the Neth-erlands.(4,7)

It is possible that biases occurred in the approach to contacts. One such bias is that only the low socioeconomic condi-tions of the contacts (perceived perhaps because of the size of the houses, given that approximately 60% had six rooms at most; Table 1) would favor the transmission of tuberculosis. However, in the present study, this was not observed, since only 11.6% of the contacts lived with more than five people in houses with up to six rooms. Another such bias is that the health professionals seem to have assumed that the risk of developing the disease would be higher among those 60% (Table 1) whose duration of exposure to the active source case had occurred within the first 10 weeks than would among those whose duration was greater than 10 weeks (p < 0.01). In other words, these professionals believed that, if contacts had not contracted tuberculosis up to that time, they would not develop the disease in the future. This perception is com-pletely wrong. In addition, the present study found that assessment of contacts was physician-centered, contrary to the Brazilian National Tuberculosis Control Program guidelines, which strongly encourage the participation of all health pro-fessionals.(2)

In conclusion, the present study underscores the urgent need for training primary health care teams on how to approach contacts appropriately, especially those who are exposed to patients with active tuberculosis.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors would like to express their gratitude to Abiqueila da Silva Conceição, Bruna Carolina Lapertosa Santos, Bruna Pereira Bicalho, and Samuel Milanez Carvalho-undergraduate medical students at the Universidade Federal de São João Del-Rei-for their assistance during the home visits and the administration of the questionnaires.

REFERENCES


1. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Secretaria de Vigilância em Saúde. Departamento de Vigilância Epidemiológica. Manual de recomendações para o controle da tuberculose no Brasil. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde; 2011.

2. Gazetta CE, Ruffino-Netto A, Pinto Neto JM, Santos Mde L, Cury MR, Vendramini SH, et al. Investigation of tuberculosis contacts in the tuberculosis control program of a medium-sized municipality in the southeast of Brazil in 2002. J Bras Pneumol. 2006;32(6):559-65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1806-37132006000600014

3. Hartwig SV, Ignotti E, Oliveira BF, Pereira HC, Scatena JH. Evaluation of surveillance of contacts of new tuberculosis cases in the state of Mato Grosso - Brazil. J Bras Pneumol. 2008:34(5):298-303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S1806-37132008000500009

4. Anger HA, Proops D, Harris TG, Li J, Kreiswirth BN, Shashkina E, et al. Active case finding and prevention of tuberculosis among a cohort of contacts exposed to infectious tuberculosis cases in New York City. Clin Infect Dis. 2012;54(9):1287-95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cid/cis029

5. Brasil. Ministério da Saúde. Departamento de Informática do SUS - DATASUS [homepage on the Internet]. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde [cited 2015 Feb 12]. População Residente - Minas Gerais. Available from: http://tabnet.datasus.gov.br/cgi/tabcgi.exe?ibge/cnv/popmg.def

6. Von Zuben FJ, Attux RR. Notas de aula IA004. Tópico 7 - Árvores de Decisão [database on the Internet]. Campinas: Unicamp. Faculdade de Engenharia Elétrica e de Computação. Departamento de Engenharia de Computação e Automação Industrial [cited 2015 Feb 12]. [Adobe Acrobat document, 44p.]. Available from: ftp://ftp.dca.fee.unicamp.br/pub/docs/vonzuben/ia004_1s10/notas_de_aula/topico7_IA004_1s10.pdf

7. Mulder C, Erkens CG, Kouw PM, Huisman EM, Meijer-Veldman W, Borgdorff MW, et al. Missed opportunities in tuberculosis control in The Netherlands due to prioritization of contact investigations. Eur J Public Health. 2012;22(2):177-82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckr017

Indexes

Development by:

© All rights reserved 2024 - Jornal Brasileiro de Pneumologia