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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Mbarara University of Science and Technology | OTHER |
| Medecins Sans Frontieres, Netherlands | OTHER |
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The proposed study aims to establish a pilot program through a prospective cohort study offering routine contact tracing, investigation and prophylaxis for LTBI, and treatment of TB disease to children <5 years living in the same household as adults diagnosed with smear/culture-positive pulmonary TB in Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital
Because children with tuberculosis (TB) are usually smear-negative and therefore less infectious, they are generally not considered a public health risk. Up to 70% of children living in the same household with an adult with infectious TB will become infected, and more than 20% of them will develop active TB disease, usually within 12 months. The individual risk of developing disease once infected is highest in children <5 years. In addition, children under 5 years are at higher risk of developing disseminated forms of TB. The impact of childhood TB is worsened by co-infection with HIV. Contact tracing, investigation and prophylaxis of childhood contacts of adult TB cases are widely recommended but rarely practiced in developing countries. The World Health Organization recommends that all NTPs screen household contacts for symptoms of disease and offer isoniazid preventive therapy (i.e. daily isoniazid for at least 6 months) to children aged less than 5 years and to all HIV-infected children who are household contacts. In Mbarara, an area with a high incidence of TB, no program currently exists for the routine investigation of child contacts of adult pulmonary TB cases. Almost all child TB cases registered are found through the evaluation of symptomatic children, often long after the adult source-cases have been investigated and treated. The number of adult cases with pulmonary TB, together with the population structure in Mbarara (>50% of the total population being children) suggests that the number of childhood TB cases is probably higher than current hospital records indicate.
The proposed study aims to establish a pilot program through a prospective cohort study offering routine contact tracing, investigation and prophylaxis for LTBI, and treatment of TB disease to children <5 years living in the same household as adults diagnosed with smear/culture-positive pulmonary TB in Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital. The study will also generate much needed data on the utility of simple symptom-based screening of child contacts for TB disease in areas where access to radiological examination and tuberculin skin test are limited and on the efficacy and safety of IPT, in a region with a significant problem of HIV co-infection.
Children aged 1 month to 5 years living in the same household (a house or cluster of houses on the same plot) with a newly diagnosed adult case of smear and/or culture-positive TB will be eligible for the study. Children will undergo a physical examination, chest Xray, tuberculin skin test and specimen collection in case of symptoms. Children will then be classified as active TB, TB infected and non infected cases. TB infected and non infected children will receive 6 months isoniazid prophylaxis with monthly monitoring of acceptability and tolerability. A final clinical assessment will be performed at 9 months. A total of 577 children contacts will be enrolled.
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Proportion of <5 year-old child contacts classified as active TB disease, LTBI or no infection | Baseline |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Number of children <5 years exposed to TB in the household of adult index cases | Baseline | |
| Number of contacts identified as active TB basing on a symptom-based approach compared with those based on chest radiography | 9 months |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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Children aged 1 month to 5 years living in the same household (a house or cluster of houses on the same plot) with a newly diagnosed adult case of smear and/or culture-positive TB will be eligible for the study
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Julius Kiwanuka, MD | Mbarara University of Science and Technology | Principal Investigator |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D014376 | Tuberculosis |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009164 | Mycobacterium Infections |
| D000193 | Actinomycetales Infections |
| D016908 | Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections |
| D001424 | Bacterial Infections |
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| Proportion of contacts with HIV co-infection classified as non infected, LTBI or active TB | 9 months |
| Median duration of exposure to symptomatic source case among the contacts in the various classes | Baseline |
| Association of various risk factors with the final classification of contacts after assessment | 9 months |
| Proportion of children with LTBI successfully treated (prevented from developing active TB disease) among HIV-infected and uninfected children | 9 months |
| Proportion of children with no TB infection or disease successfully treated (prevented from developing active TB disease or LTBI) | 9 months |
| Proportion of adverse events on treatment of TB disease, LTBI and TB exposure | 9 months |
| Adherence to IPT regimens | 9 months |
| D001423 | Bacterial Infections and Mycoses |
| D007239 | Infections |