Tuberculosis transmission attributable to close contacts and HIV status, Malawi.

Amelia C Crampin ORCID logo; Judith R Glynn ORCID logo; Hamidou Traore; Malcolm D Yates; Lorren Mwaungulu; Michael Mwenebabu; Steven D Chaguluka; Sian Floyd ORCID logo; Francis Drobniewski; Paul EM Fine; (2006) Tuberculosis transmission attributable to close contacts and HIV status, Malawi. Emerging infectious diseases, 12 (5). pp. 729-735. ISSN 1080-6040 DOI: 10.3201/eid1205.050789
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We conducted the first molecular study of tuberculosis (TB) to estimate the role of household contact and transmission from HIV-positive putative source contacts (PSCs) in a high HIV-prevalence area. TB patients in a long-term population-based study in Malawi were asked about past contact with TB. DNA fingerprinting was used to define clusters of cases with identical strains. Among 143 epidemiologically defined PSC-case pairs, fingerprinting confirmed transmission for 44% of household and family contacts and 18% of other contacts. Transmission was less likely to be confirmed if the PSC were HIV positive than if he or she was HIV negative (odds ratio 0.32, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.14-0.74). Overall, epidemiologic links were found for 11% of 754 fingerprint-clustered cases. We estimate that 9%-13% of TB cases were attributable to recent transmission from identifiable close contacts and that nearly half of the TB cases arising from recent infection had acquired the infection from HIV-positive patients.


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