Title: Practical TB Infection Control for Community-based TB Programs
1Practical TB Infection Controlfor
Community-based TB Programs
- Kevin Fennelly, MD, MPH
- Center for Emerging Re-emerging Pathogens
- Interim Director
- Division of Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine
- UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School
- fennelkp_at_umdnj.edu
- 11 June 2008
2Objectives
- To help identify situations in which there is an
increased risk of TB transmission - people (patients) and places (settings)
- To recommend practical solutions
- for programs to help protect staff
- principles and provisions
- for staff
- knowledge is power and prevention !!
3Areas I will NOT cover
- Abundant evidence that HCWs are at increased risk
for occupational TB infection (and disease) - HCW anyone exposed to patients
- Risk assessment
- Would consider most environments in TB-endemic
countries at high risk
4from Sol Permutt, 2004
5TB is transmitted by aerosols (NOT sputum)
6Particle size suspension in air
- Particle size deposition site
- 100 ?
- 20 ?
- 10 ? upper airway
- 1 - 5 ? alveolar deposition
- Time to fall the height of a room
- 10 sec
- 4 min
- 17 min
- Suspended indefinitely by room air currents
from Sol Permutt, 2004
7Estimates of Mtb Aerosol Production (quanta per
hour)
- TB ward pt on Rx
- Cavitary TB no Rx
- Laryngeal TB
- Bronchoscopy/ETT
- Autopsy
- Fennelly KP. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis
1998 2 S103
8Who is Infectious?
- Sputum smear gt smear
- AFB 3-4 gt AFB 1-2
- Cavitary gt non-cavitary
- Close gt casual contact
- Prolonged gt brief contact
- Men gt women
- Young gt old
- Borgdorff MW et al. Am J Epidemiol 2001 154934
- HIV HIV
- Cruciani M et al. Clin Infect Dis 2001 331922
- MDR vs. DS ?
9Where are Patients Most Infectious?
- Congregate settings
- Hospitals
- Correctional facilities
- Bars
- Choirs
- Airplanes, ships
- Indoors gtgt outdoors
- Increased with crowding proximity
- But no data on UV-A or UV-B effects
10When are Patients Most Infectious?
- Coughing gt Singing gt Talking
- Loudon RG et al. Am Rev Respir Dis 1969100165
- Aerosol producing procedures intubation,
bronchoscopy, sputum induction - Sepkowitz KA. Clin Infect Dis 199623954
- Not on treatment
- Unrecognized/undiagnosed
- Drug-resistant on standard therapy
11Cough Frequency Infectiousness
Loudon RG Am Rev Respir Dis 1969, 99 109.
12What is Infectious?
- Dogma 1-5 micron infectious droplet nuclei
(Wells, 1955) - Risk associated with prolonged exposures
- Reality Wells estimated particle size
distribution based on experimental nebulization
of bacillary suspensions in lab - No data from patient-generated aerosols
- Wells calculated droplets less than 25 microns
dessicated to size of infectious droplet nuclei
in less than one second
13Cough Aerosol Sampling System
- Fennelly KP et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med
2004 169 604-9
14Six-stage Andersen cascade impactor
Andersen AA. J Bacteriol 195876471.
15Cough-generated aerosols of M.tb National Jewish
Medical Research Center
- Fennelly KP et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med
2004 169 604-9
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17Cough Aerosol Sampling System
18Frequency Distribution of Cough-generated
Aerosols of M. tuberculosis and Relation to
Sputum Smear Status
19Cough-generated Aerosols of M.
tuberculosisNormalized Particle Sizes
Lower limit of size range(µ) 7.0 4.7 3.3
2.1 1.1 0.65 Deposition
Upper airway - bronchi -- alveoli
Abstract, ATS International Conference, 2004.
20Cough Aerosol ProductionMultivariate Analysis
- Best model in logistic regression
- Bacillary concentration BACTEC lt 4 days to
positive (OR11.35, p0.02) and - strong cough (OR5.41, p0.04)
- Cough strength is associated with performance
score (physical health) (Chi-square, p0.004). - Cough strength tends to be associated with CD4
counts (less advanced HIV infection)
(Chi-square, p0.07). - CD4 counts and performance scores drop out of
multivariate models probably due to correlation
with cough strength. - These data suggest that healthier patients are
more likely to be infectious than very ill
patients.
21Aerosol CFUs Predict Infectivity in Mice
Abstract, Keystone Symposium on Tuberculosis,
2005.
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23Wells-Riley Mathematical Model of Airborne
Infection
Assumptions Homogenous distribution of
infectious aerosol over 10 hours uniform
susceptibility.
- Fennelly KP Nardell EA. Infect Control Hosp
Epidemiol 1998 19754
24Summary PrinciplesTB-IC for Community Programs
- The most infectious TB patients are those who are
not on appropriate therapy - Undiagnosed, i.e., unrecognized
- Drug resistant
- TB is transmitted by aerosols
- Coughing and bacillary load important
- Healthier patients may be more infectious
- Poorly ventilated indoor environments the highest
risk
25Summary PracticesTB-IC for Community Programs
- Best administrative control
- Suspect and separate until diagnosed
- Surveillance of HCWs with TST (and/or IGRAs) and
rapid treatment of LTBI if conversions occur - Best environmental control Ventilation
- Do as much as possible outdoors
- Use directional airflow when possible
- Natural breeze or fans HCW upwind patient
downwind - Personal respiratory protection
- N95 respirators when indoors or very close
(procedures) - Surgical masks on patients to control source
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