Responding to a protracted tuberculosis outbreak: lessons from multiple rounds of investigation in a Chinese boarding school
Mao J, Wu Q, Wu K, Zhao L, Li J, Shan Z, Mao L, Lin H, et al. (10 authors)
Annals of medicine · 2026-03
Abstract
Purpose This study analysed a multi-semester pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) cluster outbreak in a Chinese boarding school to provide evidence for future epidemic control. Methods Contacts were screened via symptoms, infection tests and chest radiography. Screening expanded progressively from close contacts to same-floor contacts, then all students and staff. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) with single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and bioinformatics analysis was used for lineage classification, transmission clustering (≤12 SNPs defining a cluster) and drug resistance prediction. Results From 2020 to 2022, 20 students were diagnosed with PTB, half laboratory-confirmed. Most cases clustered in class 16 and were epidemiologically linked to the primary case (case 0), who had household PTB exposure. Case 0 and case 1 had diagnostic delays exceeding 3 and 6 months, respectively. WGS of five isolates (case 1, 3, 4, 9 and 10) collected over three semesters showed all belonged to lineage 2 and differed by ≤12 SNPs, confirming the same transmission chain. The infection rate in class 16 (46.34%) was significantly higher than other case classes (19.05%) and classes without cases (8.27%) ( χ 2 = 61.169, p Conclusions Lack of entry health examinations facilitated the outbreak. Delayed diagnosis, incomplete contact screening and absence of preventive treatment led to cross-semester persistence. The infection rate disparity confirms class 16 as the outbreak epicentre. Improving community case management, extending contact follow-up and enhancing cluster outbreak measures are recommended to prevent future outbreaks.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
- Contact Tracing
- Disease Outbreaks
- Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
- Schools
- Students
- Adolescent
- Child
- China
- Female
- Male
- Delayed Diagnosis
- Whole Genome Sequencing
- East Asian People