Latent tuberculosis infection among health-care workers using Quantiferon-TB Gold-Plus in a country with a low burden for tuberculosis: prevalence and risk factors
Almohaya A, Aldrees A, Akkielah L, Hashim AT, Almajid F, Binmoammar T, Barry MA
Annals of Saudi medicine · 2020-05
Abstract
Background Health-care workers (HCW) are susceptible to latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI). The prevalence of LTBI in HCW in Saudi Arabia has not been reported using the fourth-generation interferon gamma release assay QuantiFERON-TB Gold Plus (QFT-Plus). Objective Determine the prevalence of LTBI in a large heterogeneous HCW population and assess risk factors for LTBI. Design Cross-sectional and case-control study. Setting Tertiary academic hospital, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Patients and methods Medical records of HCWs who had QFT-Plus performed between January to December 2018 were reviewed and included in the cross-sectional study. In a subset analysis, randomly selected positive QFT-Plus cases were compared with controls selected from the same areas of work. Univariate and binary logistic regression analyses were performed to assess the significance of other factors to QFT-PLus positivity. Main outcome measures Prevalence of LTBI in HCWs and potential risk factors for LTBI. Sample size 3024 HCWs in the cross-sectional analysis; 294 cases and 294 controls in the case-control analysis. Results Twenty-four percent (n=733) of the HCWs had a positive QFT-Plus. The median (interquartile range) age was 34.0 (31.0-37.1) years, 71% were female, and only 24.8% were of Saudi nationals. Nursing represented 57.7% of HCWs, and 24.7% were working in a non-clinical area. Only 20.3% worked in TB-related departments. A higher risk of LTBI was present in HCWs who were older than 50 years (OR=1.95), from either Philippines (OR=4.7) or the Indian subcontinent (OR=4.1), working as a nurse (OR=2.7), allied health profession (OR=2.1), radiology technician (OR=3.1), or in the emergency room (OR=2.4) or intensive care unit (OR=2.1). In the binary logistic regression, independent predictors for positive QFT-Plus were age group older than 50 years (aOR=2.96), known TB exposure (aOR=1.97), and not receiving BCG at birth (aOR=3.08). Limitation Single-center, retrospective, possible recall bias for BCG vaccination. Conclusion The high prevalence of LTBI among HCW emphasizes the need to continue pre-employment screening, especially for employed personnel from high endemic areas, with targeted annual screening for the same group and other identified high-risk groups. These findings can aid in the development of national screening guidelines for LTBI in HCW. Conflict of interest None.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Occupational Diseases
- Tuberculin Test
- Prevalence
- Risk Factors
- Case-Control Studies
- Cross-Sectional Studies
- Adult
- Middle Aged
- Health Personnel
- Saudi Arabia
- Female
- Male
- Latent Tuberculosis
- Interferon-gamma Release Tests