Prevalence and incidence of symptomatic pulmonary tuberculosis based on repeated population screening in a district in Ethiopia: a prospective cohort study
Banti, Abiot Bezabeh; Askeland Winje, Brita; Hinderaker, Sven Gudmund; Heldal, Einar; Abebe, Markos; Dangisso, Mesay Hailu; Datiko, Daniel Gemechu
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
Date
2023Metadata
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Abstract
Objective In Ethiopia, one-third of the estimated
tuberculosis cases are not detected or reported. Incidence
estimates are inaccurate and rarely measured directly.
Assessing the ‘real’ incidence under programme
conditions is useful to understand the situation. This
study aimed to measure the prevalence and incidence of
symptomatic pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) during 1 year in
the adult population of Dale in Ethiopia.
Design A prospective population-based cohort study.
Setting Every household in Dale was visited three times
at 4-month intervals.
Participants Individuals aged ≥15 years.
Outcome measures Microscopy smear positive PTB
(PTB s+), bacteriologically confirmed PTB (PTB b+) by
microscopy, GeneXpert, or culture and clinically diagnosed
PTB (PTB c+).
Results Among 136 181 individuals, 2052 had
presumptive TB (persistent cough for 14 days or more with
or without haemoptysis, weight loss, fever, night sweats,
chest pain or difficulty breathing), in the first round of
household visits including 93 with PTB s+, 98 with PTB
b+ and 24 with PTB c+; adding those with PTB who were
already on treatment, the total number of PTB was 201,
and the prevalence was 147 (95% CI: 127 to 168)/100
000 population. Out of all patients with PTB, the proportion
detected by symptom screening was in PTB s+ 65%, PTB
b+ 67% and PTB c+44%. During 96 388 person-years
follow-up, 1909 had presumptive TB, 320 had PTB and the
total incidence of PTB was 332 (95% CI: 297 to 370)/100
000 person- years, while the incidence of PTB s+, PTB b+
and PTB c+ was 230 (95% CI: 201 to 262), 263 (95% CI:
232 to 297) and 68 (95% CI: 53 to 86)/100 000 person-
years, respectively.
Conclusion The prevalence of symptomatic sputum
smear-positive TB was still high, only one- third of
prevalent PTB cases notified and the incidence rate
highest in the age group 25–34 years, indicating
ongoing transmission. Finding missing people with TB
through repeated symptom screening can contribute
to reducing transmission.