The health impact of identifying a person with tuberculosis through systematic screening

IF 36.4 1区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Emily A Kendall, David W Dowdy
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Abstract

Screening populations at high risk for tuberculosis might improve clinical outcomes and reduce transmission, but the value and cost-effectiveness of population-based screening depend on the uncertain health impact of early tuberculosis detection. In this Personal View, we propose a framework for estimating the incremental health impact of systematic screening, including effects on tuberculosis morbidity, mortality, sequelae, and transmission. Our framework accounts for the timing of screening, relative to when routine diagnosis might occur and when health effects become inevitable. We also account for the heterogeneous duration of tuberculosis, as people with longer disease courses (associated with lower mortality but more transmission) are more likely to be detected by screening. Finally, we use this framework to estimate that population-based chest x-ray screening interventions might avert 2·4 disability-adjusted life-years per person (95% uncertainty interval 0·8–7·4) found to have tuberculosis through screening—well within the cost-effectiveness thresholds for many programmes with published costs.
通过系统筛查确定结核病患者对健康的影响
对结核病高风险人群进行筛查可能改善临床结果并减少传播,但基于人群的筛查的价值和成本效益取决于早期结核病检测对健康的不确定影响。在这个个人观点中,我们提出了一个框架来估计系统筛查对健康的增量影响,包括对结核病发病率、死亡率、后遗症和传播的影响。我们的框架考虑了筛查的时机,相对于常规诊断可能发生的时间和健康影响不可避免的时间。我们还考虑了结核病病程的异质性,因为病程较长的人(死亡率较低,但传播率较高)更有可能通过筛查被发现。最后,我们使用这一框架来估计,基于人群的胸部x线筛查干预措施可能会避免2.4残疾调整生命年(95%不确定区间为0.8 - 7.4),这完全在许多公布成本的项目的成本效益阈值之内。
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来源期刊
Lancet Infectious Diseases
Lancet Infectious Diseases 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
60.90
自引率
0.70%
发文量
1064
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Infectious Diseases was launched in August, 2001, and is a lively monthly journal of original research, review, opinion, and news covering international issues relevant to clinical infectious diseases specialists worldwide.The infectious diseases journal aims to be a world-leading publication, featuring original research that advocates change or sheds light on clinical practices related to infectious diseases. The journal prioritizes articles with the potential to impact clinical practice or influence perspectives. Content covers a wide range of topics, including anti-infective therapy and immunization, bacterial, viral, fungal, and parasitic infections, emerging infectious diseases, HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, mycobacterial infections, infection control, infectious diseases epidemiology, neglected tropical diseases, and travel medicine. Informative reviews on any subject linked to infectious diseases and human health are also welcomed.
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