Tuberculosis in adult migrants in Europe: a TBnet consensus statement.

IF 16.6 1区 医学 Q1 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
Heinke Kunst, Berit Lange, Olga Hovardovska, Annabelle Bockey, Dominik Zenner, Aase B Andersen, Sally Hargreaves, Manish Pareek, Jon S Friedland, Chrsitain Wejse, Graham Bothamley, Lorenzo Guglielmetti, Dima Chesov, Simon Tiberi, Alberto Matteelli, Anna M Mandalakas, Jan Heyckendorf, Johannes Eimer, Akanksha Malhotra, Javier Zamora, Anca Vasiliu, Christoph Lange
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Global migration has increased in recent decades due to war, conflict, persecutions, and natural disasters, but also secondary to increased opportunities related to work or study. Migrants' risk of tuberculosis (TB) differs by reasons for migration, socioeconomic status, mode of travel and TB risk in transit, TB incidence and healthcare provision in country of origin. Despite advances in TB care for migrants and new treatment strategies, decisions for the management of migrants at risk of TB often rely on expert opinions, rather than clinical evidence.

Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted, studies were mapped to different recommendation groups and included studies were synthesized by meta-analysis where appropriate. Current evidence on diagnosis of active TB in migrants entering the European Union /European Economic Area (EU/EEA) &UK including the clinical presentation and diagnostic delay, treatment outcomes of drug susceptible TB, prevalence and treatment outcomes of multidrug/rifampicin-resistant (MDR/RR)-TB and TB/HIV co-infection was summarised. A consensus process was used based on the evidence.

Results: We document a higher vulnerability of migrants for TB, including an increased risk of extrapulmonary TB, MDR/RR-TB, TB/HIV co-infection and worse TB treatment outcomes compared to host populations. Consensus recommendations include screening of migrants for TB/ latent TB infection (LTBI) according to country data; a minimal package for TB care in drug susceptible and MDR/RR-TB; implementation of migrant-sensitive strategies; free healthcare and preventive treatment for migrants with HIV co-infection.

Conclusion: Dedicated care for TB prevention and treatment in migrant populations within the EU/EEA &UK is essential.

欧洲成年移民中的结核病:TBnet 共识声明。
导言:近几十年来,由于战争、冲突、迫害和自然灾害,也由于工作或学习机会的增加,全球移民人数有所增加。移民罹患结核病(TB)的风险因移民原因、社会经济地位、旅行方式和过境结核病风险、原籍国结核病发病率和医疗服务提供情况而异。尽管针对移民的结核病治疗和新的治疗策略取得了进展,但对有结核病风险的移民的管理决策往往依赖于专家意见,而不是临床证据:方法:进行了系统的文献检索,将研究结果归入不同的推荐组别,并酌情通过荟萃分析对纳入的研究进行综合。对进入欧盟/欧洲经济区(EU/EEA)和英国的移民中活动性肺结核诊断的现有证据进行了总结,包括临床表现和诊断延迟、药物敏感性肺结核的治疗结果、耐多药/利福平(MDR/RR)肺结核的患病率和治疗结果以及肺结核/艾滋病毒合并感染。在证据的基础上达成了共识:结果:与东道国人口相比,我们发现移民更容易感染结核病,包括肺外结核病、耐 MDR/RR 结核病、结核病/艾滋病毒合并感染的风险更高,结核病治疗效果更差。共识建议包括:根据国家数据对移民进行肺结核/潜伏肺结核感染(LTBI)筛查;为易服药肺结核和 MDR/RR-TB 患者提供最基本的肺结核护理套餐;实施对移民敏感的策略;为合并感染 HIV 的移民提供免费医疗和预防性治疗:结论:在欧盟/欧洲经济区和英国,为移民人口提供专门的结核病预防和治疗服务至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
European Respiratory Journal
European Respiratory Journal 医学-呼吸系统
CiteScore
27.50
自引率
3.30%
发文量
345
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Respiratory Journal (ERJ) is the flagship journal of the European Respiratory Society. It has a current impact factor of 24.9. The journal covers various aspects of adult and paediatric respiratory medicine, including cell biology, epidemiology, immunology, oncology, pathophysiology, imaging, occupational medicine, intensive care, sleep medicine, and thoracic surgery. In addition to original research material, the ERJ publishes editorial commentaries, reviews, short research letters, and correspondence to the editor. The articles are published continuously and collected into 12 monthly issues in two volumes per year.
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