Transmission of tuberculosis and predictors of large clusters within three years in an urban setting in Tokyo, Japan: a population-based molecular epidemiological study
Izumi K, Murase Y, Uchimura K, Kaebeta A, Ishihara K, Kaguraoka S, Takii T, Ohkado A
BMJ open · 2019-05
Abstract
Objective Molecular epidemiology is a promising tool for understanding tuberculosis transmission dynamics but has not been sufficiently utilised in Asian countries including Japan. The aim of this study was to estimate the proportion of TB cases attributable to recent transmission and to identify risk factors of genotype clustering and the development of large clusters within 3 years in an urban setting in Japan. Design and setting Long-term cross-sectional observational study combining the characteristics of patients with culture-positive TB notified in Shinjuku City, Tokyo (2002-2013), with genotype data of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURE: Genotype clustering rate and association between genotype clustering status and explanatory variables. Results Among 1025 cases, 515 were localised within 113 genotype clusters. The overall clustering rate was 39.2%. Significantly higher rates were found in patients aged Conclusion Our results indicated that a large proportion of patients with culture-positive TB were involved in the recent TB transmission chain. Foreign-born persons still have a limited impact on transmission in the Japanese urban setting. Intensified public health interventions, including the active case finding, need to focus on individuals with socioeconomic risk factors that are significantly associated with tuberculosis transmission and clusters with shorter registration intervals between the first two cases.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- Cluster Analysis
- Risk Factors
- Cross-Sectional Studies
- Genotype
- Adult
- Aged
- Aged, 80 and over
- Middle Aged
- Urban Health
- Tokyo
- Female
- Male
- Molecular Epidemiology