Sex Bias in Tuberculosis in the Developing World

S. Shaw, K. Purdy
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Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB), the most deadly global single organism infectious disease, kills nearly twice as many men as women. Understanding the factors that drive this bias in TB mortality is an important aspect of the global effort to reduce the enormous burden of this disease in the developing world. One third of the world’s population is estimated to be infected TB, with Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC) bearing the greatest disease burden. In LMIC sex bias in TB is influenced by sociocultural, behavioural as well as biological factors, with dynamic interactions between reporting variables, other confounding variables and physiological mechanisms, which each influence one another to produce the male-biased sex ratio observed in TB transmission, prevalence and mortality. While confounding factors are addressed in the existing global drive to tackle TB it is the biological aspects of sex bias in TB that present specific challenges for diagnosis and treatment in men and women as they potentially influence future immunological-based interventions to treat TB.
发展中国家结核病的性别偏见
结核病是全球最致命的单体传染病,其致死人数几乎是女性的两倍。了解导致结核病死亡率出现这种偏差的因素是全球努力减轻发展中国家结核病巨大负担的一个重要方面。据估计,世界上三分之一的人口感染了结核病,中低收入国家承担着最大的疾病负担。在LMIC中,结核病的性别偏见受到社会文化、行为和生物学因素的影响,报告变量、其他混杂变量和生理机制之间存在动态相互作用,这些变量相互影响,产生了在结核病传播、流行率和死亡率中观察到的男性偏见性别比。虽然在现有的全球应对结核病运动中解决了混杂因素,但结核病性别偏见的生物学方面给男性和女性的诊断和治疗带来了具体挑战,因为它们可能会影响未来基于免疫的结核病治疗干预措施。
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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