Population-based contact investigation of a cluster of tuberculosis cases in a small village

A cluster of five cases of tuberculosis (TB) in persons aged 19–23 years who were not close contacts was detected in a small village in Spain in 2006. All culture isolates had the same chromosomal-DNA restriction pattern. Contact investigations of family members, friends, workmates and schoolmates w...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Epidemiology and infection Vol. 137; no. 10; pp. 1426 - 1435
Main Authors: CASTILLA, J., PALMERA, R., NAVASCUÉS, A., ABETI, M., GUILLERMO, A., IRISARRI, F., JIMÉNEZ, M. S., GARCÍA CENOZ, M., BARRICARTE, A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 01-10-2009
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Summary:A cluster of five cases of tuberculosis (TB) in persons aged 19–23 years who were not close contacts was detected in a small village in Spain in 2006. All culture isolates had the same chromosomal-DNA restriction pattern. Contact investigations of family members, friends, workmates and schoolmates were complemented with tuberculin screening offered to the resident population born between 1976 and 1995. Expanded contact tracing detected two new cases of TB, 27 tuberculin conversions and an excess of latent tuberculosis infections (LTI) in persons born between 1978 and 1990. The contacts of two cases had a significantly elevated prevalence of LTI. Two secondary cases of TB, 33·3% of those diagnosed with LTI and 47·8% of the converters were unaware of any contact with the TB cases, but had frequented some of the same bars. This study suggests that a considerable percentage of the episodes of TB transmission in young people may escape detection in conventional contact studies.
Bibliography:ArticleID:00224
istex:1B3F7F7C04F8CB3A5EE7BDEDEA5A35C437D57781
PII:S0950268809002246
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ISSN:0950-2688
1469-4409
DOI:10.1017/S0950268809002246