High incidence of pulmonary tuberculosis persists a decade after immigration, the Netherlands.Incidence rates of pulmonary tuberculosis pulmonary tuberculosis n. Tuberculosis of the lungs. pulmonary tuberculosis Infectious disease Infection by Mycobacterium tuberculosis among immigrants from high incidence countries remain high for at least a decade after immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. into the Netherlands. Possible explanations are reactivation reactivation to become active after a period of quiescence or, as in bacterial and viral infections, latency. cross reactivation of old infections and infection transmitted after immigration. Control policies should be determined on the basis of the as-yet unknown main causes of the persistent high incidence. ********** We describe patterns of incidence rates of pulmonary tuberculosis in immigrants in the Netherlands according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the length of time since immigration. Insight in these patterns is needed to evaluate tuberculosis control policies that aim to reduce transmission. The Dutch control policy differs from policies in other industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es v.tr. 1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example). 2. countries: not only is obligatory screening by chest x-ray chest x-ray, n an examination of the chest using x-rays. Routinely performed in patients complaining of chest pain to rule out respiratory or heart disease. chest X-ray Chest film, see there performed at the time of immigration, but immigrants are also invited for voluntary follow-up screening at 6-month intervals in the first 2 years after immigration. The Study We performed a retrospective cohort analysis of all legal immigrants notified as having pulmonary tuberculosis in the Netherlands between 1996 and 2000; pulmonary tuberculosis referred to any form of active tuberculosis that involved the lungs. Patient data were obtained from the Netherlands Tuberculosis Register and included date of birth, date of arrival in the Netherlands, time of diagnosis, localization Customizing software and documentation for a particular country. It includes the translation of menus and messages into the native spoken language as well as changes in the user interface to accommodate different alphabets and culture. See internationalization and l10n. of tuberculosis, country of origin, and sex. To account for the fact that the reported time of immigration was often exactly 1,2, 3, ... years before diagnosis ("digit preference Digit preference is a cause that makes measuring e.g. blood pressure to give different results when different persons measure it. Different persons round off the value, either to a lower one or a higher one. "), time since immigration was categorized with boundaries well apart from the preferred digits (Table). Data on the number of immigrants residing in the Netherlands were obtained from the Organization for Reception of Asylum Seekers (COA (Certificate Of Authenticity) A document that accompanies software which states that it is an original package from the manufacturer. It generally includes a seal with a difficult-to-copy emblem such as a holographic image. ) and from municipal population registers (GBA GBA Game Boy Advance (Nintendo 32-Bit Game Boy) GBA Gran Buenos Aires (Argentina) GBA God Bless America GBA Gundam Battle Assault (video game) GBA Alderney ) as provided by Statistics Netherlands Statistics Netherlands is a Dutch governmental institution that gathers statistical information about the Netherlands. In Dutch it is known as the Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek and often abbreviated to CBS. . Person-years at risk for pulmonary tuberculosis were first calculated separately for both the COA and GBA registers. Privacy regulations prohibit matching of the two datasets. Since asylum seekers are allowed to register themselves in the GBA after 1 year of stay in the Netherlands, overlap between the two registers had to be accounted for. We assumed that the percentage of asylum seekers registered twice increased linearly from an initial 0% of asylum seekers in the COA register during the first 6 months after immigration, to 80% at 3.5 years after immigration. We recognize the arbitrariness of this assumption. Therefore, we carried out a sensitivity analysis with contrasting assumptions--asylum seekers were never versus always registered twice--to assess the consequences of the uncertainty regarding double registrations. This did not alter the conclusions (results not shown). By the end of 2000, close to two million immigrants were residing in the Netherlands, of a total population of nearly 16 million. Among the immigrant population, 2,661 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis were identified during 1999-2000. Information about country of origin and time since immigration was missing in 3% and 13% of the study patients, respectively, and was accounted for by multiple imputation Multiple imputation is a statistical technique for analyzing incomplete data sets. See also
In the legal sense, the term imputed is used to describe an action, fact, or quality, the knowledge of which is charged to an individual based upon the actions of another for whom the individual is responsible rather than on the individual's datasets. Incidence rates were only calculated for the 2,005 patients in whom tuberculosis was diagnosed more than half a year after immigration because many patients with a case diagnosed within 6 months may already have had active tuberculosis at the time of immigration. These patients should be considered prevalent rather than incident cases. The Figure shows that incidence rates decreased after 0.5-1.4 years since immigration for immigrants from most of the countries. Subsequently, the incidence rates were mostly stable from 1.5 to 9.4 years since immigration for the countries with initial incidence rates above or around 50/100,000 (as a general rule, immigrants from countries with incidence rates above this level are eligible for screening). African immigrants, especially Somalis, had the highest incidence rates. Since few Somalis immigrated before 1991, the observed increase in incidence rates >9.4 years after immigration has wide confidence intervals. In contrast to the incidence rates for most of the countries, incidence rates for immigrants from Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles Netherlands Antilles, island group, an autonomous part of the Netherlands (2005 est. pop. 220,000), 371 sq mi (961 sq km), West Indies. Formerly known as the Dutch West Indies and Netherlands West Indies, they are divided into two groups. were initially low and significantly increased after an initial decrease. Average incidence rates after immigration varied from 379/100,000 in Somalis to 5/100,000 in immigrants from the category "other countries" (Table). For comparison, the current incidence rate of pulmonary tuberculosis in the indigenous Dutch population is approximately 3/100,000. [FIGURE OMITTED] Univariate and multivariate Poisson regression were performed by using Stata (Stata Corp; College Station, TX). For each imputed dataset, all risk factors were significant in the multivariate regression. The Table provides the combined multivariate results. A clear pattern in incidence rates was not observed in the first 3.4 years after immigration, but overall the incidence rates gradually decreased as time since immigration increased. Nonetheless, compared to 1.5-2.4 years, the incidence rate for 9.5-19.4 years since immigration had decreased by only 42%. Fifty-eight percent of patients, including those in whom tuberculosis was detected in the first 6 months, were found more than 2.5 years after immigration to the Netherlands, and 29% were found after more than 9.5 years. As often observed, we found considerably lower incidence rates for children than for young adults and a significantly higher rate for males than females. Except for age, the univariate incidence rate ratios were largely similar to the multivariate ratios. In univariate analysis, incidence rate ratios in adults decreased with age, whereas in multivariate analysis multivariate analysis, n a statistical approach used to evaluate multiple variables. multivariate analysis, n a set of techniques used when variation in several variables has to be studied simultaneously. the oldest age group had an increased risk. This result is due to confounding confounding when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies. confounding factor with country of origin and time since immigration: African immigrants had the highest incidence rates, but relatively few of them were older than 65 years, and they had immigrated relatively recently. Statistically significant, but small, differences in incidence rates according to year of diagnosis were observed (Table). Discussion Our study shows that, in spite of a gradual decrease, the incidence rates of pulmonary tuberculosis in immigrants remain high even a decade after immigration. The persistent high incidence rates are consistent with results of previous studies (2-5). Our study combines data on all immigrant patients in whom tuberculosis was detected and all legal immigrants present in a 5-year period in a low incidence country, enabling detailed analysis with a long follow-up period. We did not find a steep decline in incidence rates after immigration. One might anticipate such a decline, since the proportion of recently infected or reinfected persons will be higher sooner after immigration than later due to relatively low levels of transmission in the Netherlands. Recent infection is a known risk factor for developing active tuberculosis (6,7). Several explanations may account for the absence of an initial steep decline in incidence rates. First, the proportion of immigrants who were recently infected or reinfected may already have been low at the time of immigration. Next, the risk of reactivation of latent tuberculosis latent tuberculosis Infectious disease Infection with M tuberculosis that has been contained by the host's immune system and thus does not infect others Diagnosis Tuberculin skin test; release of IFN-γ in blood after PPD stimulation. See Tuberculosis. infection in these immigrants may have been higher than previously modeled in white nonimmigrant non·im·mi·grant n. 1. An alien, such as a tourist or a member of a ship's crew, who enters a country for a temporary stay. 2. An alien who returns to his or her own country after a stay abroad. populations (8,9). Finally, immigrants residing in the Netherlands may have acquired new infections or reinfections, either through transmission within the Netherlands or through frequent visits to their country of origin. DNA fingerprinting DNA fingerprinting or DNA profiling, any of several similar techniques for analyzing and comparing DNA from separate sources, used especially in law enforcement to identify suspects from hair, blood, semen, or other biological materials found at data suggest that transmission within the Netherlands may indeed have occurred, although it is not the key factor; in a recent study, infections in 30% to 40% of Turkish, Moroccan, and Somali patients could be attributed to recent transmission, but 58% of all immigrant patients were not part of a cluster (10). The Dutch screening policy consists of mandatory screening of immigrants at entry and voluntary screening in the next 2 years. Less than 50% of immigrants undergo voluntary screening in the second year (11). Screening identified 41% of the patients with a case diagnosed from 0.5 to 2.4 years after immigration. Screening may have influenced the observed incidence pattern slightly by diagnosing cases earlier than in the absence of screening. However, the average delay in detecting tuberculosis in immigrant patients who seek medical care themselves (passive detection) in the Netherlands is <3 months (12), and several studies reported upon by Toman to·man n. A gold coin formerly used in Persia worth 10,000 dinars. [Farsi t m (13) suggest that the period in which
tuberculosis is detectable by x-ray, but has not yet led to clinical
symptoms (preclinical detectable phase), is <6 months. Thus the
incidence pattern in the first view years after immigration would not be
very different in the absence of screening. The possible influence of
screening on transmission has apparently not resulted in a pronounced
downward trend in incidence rates over time: they would only have
remained somewhat higher without screening.In many industrialized countries, an increasing proportion of tuberculosis patients are immigrants. Immigrants account for >50% of the incidence in the Netherlands (12). Control policies with regard to immigrant tuberculosis usually rely on chest x-ray screening and treatment of active tuberculosis. A supplemental approach, recommended by the Institute of Medicine (14), is to conduct tuberculin skin testing Tuberculin Skin Test Definition Tuberculosis (TB) is an airborne infectious disease caused by the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Besides culturing in the laboratory, the two most common types of tests to screen for exposure to this disease and to apply preventive treatment preventive treatment n. See prophylactic treatment. of latent infections. Whether all tuberculin tuberculin /tu·ber·cu·lin/ (-lin) a sterile solution containing the growth products of, or specific substances extracted from, the tubercle bacillus; used in various forms in the diagnosis of tuberculosis; see also under test. skin test-positive immigrants should be treated, or only selected high-risk groups such as immigrants with radiographic radiographic (rā´dēōgraf´ik), adj relating to the process of radiography, the finished product, or its use. evidence of inactive disease, is under debate (15). Adherence to preventive treatment is also a point to consider (15). To answer the question of why the incidence rates remain high, the relative importance of three factors needs to be established: reactivation of old infections, transmission in the host country, and infections acquired during visits to the countries of origin. These answers are essential to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the Dutch screening policy and of alternative options, including other screening policies and use of preventive treatment.
Table. Incidence rate and relative risk of pulmonary tuberculosis
according to time since immigration, country of origin, age, sex,
and year of diagnosis for immigrants in the Netherlands, 1996-2000
Incidence
rate/100,000
person-years Multivariate relative
(cases) risk (95% CI)
Time since immigration (y)
0.5-1.4 59 (292) 1.39 (1.14 to 1.69)
1.5-2.4 44 (169) 1.00
2.5-3.4 55 (166) 1.14 (0.91 to 1.43)
3.5-4.4 43 (118) 0.88 (0.69 to 1.11)
4.5-6.4 42 (245) 0.89 (0.72 to 1.09)
6.5-9.4 34 (247) 0.80 (0.65 to 0.98)
9.5-19.4 21 (338) 0.58 (0.48 to 0.71)
[greater than or equal 15 (430) 0.49 (0.40 to 0.60)
to] 19.5
Country of origin
Morocco 47 (334) 1.83 (1.57 to 2.14)
Somalia 379 (392) 11.30 (9.63 to 13.25)
Other Africa 69 (270) 2.14 (1.82 to 2.52)
Turkey 21 (178) 0.83 (0.69 to 1.00)
Asia 25 (419) 1.00
Suriname and Antilles 16 (194) 0.68 (0.57 to 0.81)
Latin America 19 (33) 0.76 (0.53 to 1.09)
Central and Eastern Europe 22 (100) 0.74 (0.59 to 0.93)
Other countries 5 (86) 0.21 (0.16 to 0.26)
Age (y)
0-14 13 (78) 0.25 (0.20 to 0.32)
15-24 45 (412) 1.00 (0.88 to 1.13)
25-34 39 (661) 1.00
35-44 28 (424) 0.99 (0.87 to 1.12)
45-54 17 (185) 0.81 (0.68 to 0.97)
55-64 17 (117) 0.87 (0.71 to 1.08)
[greater than or equal 19 (128) 1.32 (1.05 to 1.64)
to] 65
Sex
Male 37 (1,291) 1.62 (1.48 to 1.78)
Female 20 (714) 1.00
Y of diagnosis
1996 31 (413) 1.00
1997 30 (408) 0.97 (0.85 to 1.12)
1998 25 (356) 0.80 (0.70 to 0.93)
1999 28 (408) 0.87 (0.76 to 1.00)
2000 27 (421) 0.83 (0.73 to 0.96)
Acknowledgments We are grateful to the Dutch Municipal Health Services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract , the Agency for Reception of Asylum Seekers, and Statistics Netherlands for providing the data for this study. References (1.) Rubin DB, Schenker N. Multiple imputation in health-care databases: an overview and some applications. Stat Med 1991;10:585-98. (2.) Zuber PL, McKenna MT, Binkin NJ, Onorato IM, Castro KG. Long-term risk of tuberculosis among foreign-born persons in the United States. JAMA JAMA abbr. Journal of the American Medical Association 1997;278:304-7. (3.) Rieder HL, Cauthen GM, Kelly GD, Bloch AB, Snider DE Jr. Tuberculosis in the United States. JAMA 1989;262:385-9. (4.) Wilcke JTR JTR Joint Travel Regulation JTR Jack the Ripper JTR Jobs Through Recycling JTR Joint Tactical Radio JTR John the Revelator (song) JTR Joint Transport Rotorcraft JTR Santorini/Thira Is, Greece - Santorini , Poulsen S, Askgaard DS, Enevoldsen HK, Ronne T, Kok-Jensen A. Tuberculosis in a cohort of Vietnamese refugees after arrival in Denmark 1979 1982. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 1998;2:219-24. (5.) Lillebaek T. Andersen AB, Dirksen A, Smith E, Skovgaard LT, Kok-Jensen A. Persistent high incidence of tuberculosis in immigrants in a low-incidence country. Emerg Infect Dis 2002;8:679-84. (6.) Sutherland I. The ten-year incidence of clinical tuberculosis following "conversion" in 2550 individuals aged 14 to 19 at the time of conversion, TSRU progress report; The Hague: KNCV KNCV Koninklijke Nederlandse Chemische Vereniging (Royal Dutch Chemical Association) KNCV Koninklijke Nederlandse Centrale Vereniging tot bestrijding der Tuberculose (Dutch Tuberculosis Foundation) ; 1968. (7.) Ferebee SH. Controlled chemoprophylaxis chemoprophylaxis /che·mo·pro·phy·lax·is/ (-pro?fi-lak´sis) prevention of disease by means of a chemotherapeutic agent. che·mo·pro·phy·lax·is n. Disease prevention by use of chemicals or drugs. trials in tuberculosis. A general review. Bibl Tuberc 1970;26:28-106. (8.) Sutherland I, Svandova E, Radhakrishna S. The development of clinical tuberculosis following infection with tubercle tubercle (t `bərky l') [Lat.,=little swelling], small, usually solid, nodule or prominence. bacilli bacilli /ba·cil·li/ (bah-sil´i) plural of bacillus. bacilli see bacillus. . 1. A theoretical model for the development of clinical tuberculosis following infection, linking from data on the risk of tuberculous tuberculous /tu·ber·cu·lous/ (too-ber´ku-lus) pertaining to or affected with tuberculosis; caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. tu·ber·cu·lous adj. 1. infection and the incidence of clinical tuberculosis in the Netherlands. Tubercle 1982;63:255-68. (9.) Vynnycky E, Fine PE. The natural history of tuberculosis: the implications of age-dependent risks of disease and the role of reinfection reinfection /re·in·fec·tion/ (-in-fek´shun) a second infection by the same agent or a second infection of an organ with a different agent. re·in·fec·tion n. . Epidemiol Infect 1997;119:183-201. (10.) Borgdorff MW, Nagelkerke NJD NJD New Jersey Devils , de Haas PEW, van Soolingen D. Transmission of mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculosis n. Tubercic bacillus. Mycobacterium tuberculosis depending on the age and sex of source cases. Am J Epidemiol 2001;154:934-43. (11.) Bwire R, Verver S, Annee-van Bavel JACM JACM Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery JACM Just Another Code Monkey , Kouw P, Keizer ST, et al. Dekkingsgraad van tuberculosesereening bij immigranten: sterke afname bij vervolgscreening. [Tuberculosis screening coverage in immigrants: marked decrease after entry screening.] Ned Tijdschr Geneesk 2001;145:823-6. (12.) Verver S, Bwire R, Borgdorff MW. Screening for pulmonary tuberculosis among immigrants: estimated effect on severity of disease and duration of infectiousness. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 2001;5:419-25. (13.) Toman K. Tuberculosis. Case-finding and chemotherapy. Questions and answers. Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva. : World Health Organization; 1979. (14.) Institute of Medicine. Ending neglect: the elimination of tuberculosis in the United States. Washington: National Academy Press; 2000. (15.) Coker R, Lambregts van Weezenbeek K. Mandatory screening and treatment of immigrants for latent tuberculosis in the USA: just restraint? Lancet Infect Dis 2001;1:270-6. Ms. Vos is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam and at KNCV Tuberculosis Foundation, The Hague, the Netherlands. Her research interests include the cost-effectiveness of tuberculosis control policies, particularly regarding immigrants in the Netherlands. Address for correspondence: Annelies M. Vos, Dept. of Public Health, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, P.O. Box 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, the Netherlands; fax: +31-10-489449; email: a.vos@erasmusmc.nl Annelies M. Vos, * ([dagger]) Abraham Meima, * Suzanne Verver, ([dagger]) Caspar W.N. Looman, * Vivian Bos, * Martien W. Borgdorff, ([dagger]) and J. Dik F. Habbema * * Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; and ([dagger]) KNCV Tuberculosis Foundation, The Hague, the Netherlands |
|
||||||||||||||||||

m
`bərky
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion