Delivering multi-disease screening to migrants for latent TB and blood-borne viruses in an emergency department setting: A feasibility study
Hargreaves S, Nellums LB, Johnson C, Goldberg J, Pantelidis P, Rahman A, Friedland FMedSci JS
Travel medicine and infectious disease · 2020-02
Abstract
Background Screening for latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) in migrants is important for elimination of tuberculosis in low-incidence countries, alongside the need to detect blood-borne infections to align with new guidelines on migrant screening for multiple infections in European countries. However, feasibility needs to be better understood. Methods We did a feasibility study to test an innovative screening model offering combined testing for LTBI (QuantiFERON), HIV, hepatitis B/C in a UK emergency department, with two year follow-up. Results 96 economic migrants, asylum seekers and refugees from 43 countries were screened (46 [47.9%] women; mean age 35.2 years [SD 11.7; range 18-73]; mean time in the UK 4.8 years [SD 3.2; range 0-10]). 14 migrants (14.6%) tested positive for LTBI alongside HIV [1], hepatitis B [2], and hepatitis C [1] Of migrants with LTBI, 5 (35.7%) were successfully engaged in treatment. 74 (77.1%) migrants reported no previous screening since migrating to the UK. Conclusion Multi-disease screening in this setting is feasible and merits being further tested in larger-scale studies. However, greater emphasis must be placed on ensuring successful treatment outcomes. We identified major gaps in current screening provision; most migrants had been offered no prior screening despite several years since migration, which holds relevance to policy and practice in the UK and other European countries.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Viruses
- Mass Screening
- Feasibility Studies
- Adolescent
- Adult
- Aged
- Middle Aged
- Refugees
- Transients and Migrants
- Emergency Service, Hospital
- Europe
- Female
- Male
- Young Adult
- Latent Tuberculosis