TUESDAY, July 1 (HealthDay News) -- It may be possible to
predict tuberculosis (TB) outbreaks by examining characteristics of
the first two cases of the disease, Dutch researchers report.
Based on their analysis of data on more than 18,200 Dutch
patients with reported TB between 1993 and 2004, the researchers
concluded there's a 56 percent chance of a large TB outbreak if the
first two patients: are diagnosed within three months of each
other; live in urban areas; and if one or both patients are of
sub-Saharan African nationality.
"Early identification of clusters that could potentially become
large could help focus TB control efforts, especially in
low-incidence countries that approach the elimination phase of TB,"
wrote lead author Sandra V. Kik, an epidemiologist at the KNCV
Tuberculosis Foundation in The Hague. "The aim of our study was
therefore to determine which characteristics of the first two cases
can predict the development of a large cluster."
The study was published in the current issue of the
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care
Medicine.
"The main advantage of using patient characteristics as
predictors is that these are known shortly after diagnosis and easy
to determine as this information is often part of the current
registration system," Kik said.
While the specific characteristics of the two-patient model may
vary from country to country, the research methodology used in this
study could be used to identify characteristics with the most
predictive power in any country, the study authors said.
"This study confirms previous understanding that tuberculosis is
a social -- as well as infectious disease -- that depends for its
spread on the nature of human interactions and the social context,"
Dr. John Heffner, past president of the American Thoracic Society,
said in a prepared statement.
"What is fascinating is that the authors identified quite early
in a cluster outbreak specific social factors that predicted the
rapidity and extent of disease transmission, which allows more
focused interventions," he said.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more
about
TB.