Title: Tuberculosis Huminis et bovis
1Tuberculosis Huminis et Bovis
Dr. S. K. Jindal www.jindalchest.com
2TUBERCULOSIS a global emergency
- H. Nakajima
- World Health (ed) 1993
3Tuberculosis A Global Emergency
- TB kills 5,000 people a day 2 million each year
- One third of the worlds population is infected
with TB - More than 100,000 children will die needlessly
from TB this year - Hundreds of thousands of children will become TB
orphans this year - HIV and MDR TB will make the TB epidemic much
more severe unless urgent action is taken
4India is the highest TB burden country globally
accounting for one fifth of the global incidence
Globally 9 million new TB cases occur annually
Source WHO Geneva WHO Report 2006 Global
Tuberculosis Control Surveillance, Planning and
Financing
5TB is the leading single infectious cause of
death in India
6The National Problem
- Large pool of patients
- Renewed and perpetuated
- Difficult to approach
- Difficult to find, hold and treat
- Shortage of beds
7TB in India
- Per year Per Day
- Infection gt 7 million gt 20000
- Disease gt 2 million gt 5000
- Death gt 4 lacs gt 1000
- Children forced 3 lacs -
- to leave school
- Women losing 1 lac -
- status
8TB research in IndiaIndian contribution
- Supreme importance of bacteriology in diagnosis
and control - Hospitalization not essential
- Principles of chemotherapy intermittent is as
good
9- All countries benefit from the fruits of Indian
research all countries except India. - H. Maher, D.G. WHO
- (Quoted by Grzybowski. Tuberc Lung Dis, Ed, 1993)
10HIV Infection TB Risk
- Annual risk about 10
- Life Time Risk of TB
- w.r.t. HIV status
- - Negative 5-10
- - Positive 50
11ECONOMIC BURDEN Per Year
- Total costs Rs. 12000 crores
- (US 3 b)
- Loss of work days 17 crores
- At a cost of 700 crores
12Classification of mycobacteria
- Group 4
- Non- or rarely pathogenic
- Mycobacterium gordonae
- Mycobacterium smegmatis
- Group 5
- Animal pathogens
- Mycobacterium paratuberculosis
- Mycobacterium lepraemurium
- Group 1
- Obligate pathogens
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium leprae
- Mycobacterium bovis
- Group 2
- Skin pathogens
- Mycobacterium marinum
- Mycobacterium ulcerans
- Group 3
- Opportunistic pathogens
- Mycobacterium kansasii
- Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAIC)
13Mycobacterium bovis
- Subset of mycobacteria
- Include M. tuberculosis
- M. africanum
- M. microti
- (Live attenuated strains of M.
bovis is used in BCG)
14M.bovis TB in Humans
- Transmission from animals/human
- Inhalation route
- Unpasteurized milk
- Karlson et al (Ann Int Med 1970)
- Lab primates
- Renner et al (ARRD, 1974)
- Commercial elk herds
- Fanning (Lancet 1991)
- Persistence of M. bovis in US
- Dankner et al (Med 1993)
15The public health importance of animal TB
- WHO Report of the Expert Committee on
Tuberculosis 1950 - "The committee recognizes the seriousness of
human infection with bovine tuberculosis in
countries where the disease in cattle is
prevalent. There is the danger of transmission of
infection by direct contact between diseased
cattle and farm workers and their families, as
well as from infected food products."
16Bovine tuberculosis occurrence, in Asia
17Control measures for bovine tuberculosis based on
test-and-slaughter policy and disease
notification, Asia
18Risk Factors of Bovine TB
- Unpasteurized milk of infected cattle
- Sharing of the same micro-environment and
dwelling premises by humans and animals - Immuno-compromised patients
- HIV infection (BCG vaccination in patients with
AIDS) - Leukaemias, Malignancies
- Ranch workers, veterinarians
- Common watering place (for live stock)
19- Currently, the BTB in humans is becoming
increasingly important in developing countries,
as, especially in rural areas. At present, due to
the association of mycobacteria with the HIV/AIDS
pandemic and in view of the high prevalence of
HIV/AIDS in the developing world and
susceptibility of AIDS patients to tuberculosis
in general, the situation change is most likely
(Amanfu, 2006). This diseases presence in humans
has been reduced as a result of the
20Zoonotic TB - Elephants
- A report from India (July 5, 2009)
- (TB in domesticated elephants from Kerala,
Karnataka, TN, Andaman Nicobar) - Temple elephants 16 of 63 (25.4)
- Individual owners 24 of 160
(15.0) - Forest department 10 of 164 (6.1)
- Total 50 of 387
(12.9) - (Transmission from humans)
21Relative Risk for Developing Active TB by
selected clinical conditions
Clinical Condition Relative Risk
Silicosis 30
Diabetes mellitus 2.0 4.1
Chronic renal failure/hemodialysis 10.0 25.3
Gastrectomy 2 5
Jejunoileal bypass 27 63
Solid organ transplantation
Renal 37
Cardiac 20-74
Carcinoma of head or neck 16
Note Relative to Control Population, independent of tuberculin-test status. Note Relative to Control Population, independent of tuberculin-test status.
22Clinical Features
- Indistinguishable from M. tuberculosis huminis
- Accounts for about 3.1 of all forms of TB 2.1
of pulmonary and 9.4 of extra-pulmonary forms. - Pulmonary
- Extrapulmonary
- Cervical adenitis
- Abdominal TB
- Skin (Lupus vulgaris)
- Disseminated infection
- (esp. in children)
23TB control efforts in India
- 1997 RNTCP started as a national programme
- 1998 Large scale RNTCP expansion began
- Early 2000 135 million population covered
Monitoring Mission conducted - Sept 2003 741 million population covered
- Monitoring Mission appreciates rapid expansion
- and overall quality
- Mar 2006 100 population covered
- Next 5-year plan approved with additional
activities, such as DOTS-Plus
24DOTS Strategy
- A strategy to ensure treatment completion in
which - Treatment observer (DOT provider) must be
accessible and acceptable to the patient and
accountable to the health system - DOT provider administers the drugs
- in intensive phase.
- Ensures that the patient takes medicines
- correctly in continuation phase.
- Provides the necessary information
- and encouragement for completion of treatment.
25RNTCP treatment guidelines
CATEGORY I New smear Seriously ill smear negative Seriously ill extra- pulmonary TB 2 H3R3Z3E3 / 4H3R3
CATEGORY II Previously treated smear- positive ( relapse, failure, treatment after default) 2 H3R3Z3E3S3/ 1 H3R3Z3E3 / 5H3R3E3
CATEGORY III New smear negative and extra pulmonary TB, not seriously ill 2 H3R3Z3 / 4H3R3
ALL TREATMENT THRICE WEEKLY. CAT I AND CAT II
EXTENDED by ONE MONTH IF SMEAR POSITIVE AT THE
END OF INITIAL INTENSIVE PHASE
26Impact of RNTCP
- Cure rate More than doubled and 85 global
target achieved - Case detection Almost at the target of 70 (72
in 2004, 66 in 2005) - Case fatality Reduced from 29 to 4 in NSP
cases, and deaths due to TB from 500,000 to
lt370,000 a year - Treatment Over 6 million patients initiated on
DOTS - TB incidence and prevalence Early signs of start
of decline.
27India has already implemented most of the
additional components of the Stop TB Strategy
28VISION A world free of TB
- GOAL
- - To reduce dramatically the global burden of TB
by 2015 in line with the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) and the Stop TB Partnership targets - OBJECTIVES
- - To achieve universal access to high-quality
diagnosis and patient-centred treatment - - To reduce the suffering and socioeconomic
burden associated with TB - - To protect poor and vulnerable populations from
TB, TB/HIV and MDR-TB - - To support development of new tools and enable
their timely and effective use - TARGETS
-
- MDG 6, Target 8
- - TB halted by 2015 and begun to reverse the
incidence - - Targets linked to the MDGs and endorsed by the
Stop TB Partnership
29Millennium Development Goal 6
- Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 6, Target 8
Halt and begin to reverse the incidence of TB by
2015 - Targets linked to the MDGs and endorsed by the
Stop TB Partnership - by 2005 detect at least 70 of new sputum
smear-positive TB cases and cure at least 85 of
these cases - by 2015 reduce TB prevalence and death rates by
50 relative to 1990 - by 2050 eliminate TB as a public health problem
(1 case per million population)
30Components of the strategy and implementation
approaches
- Pursue high-quality DOTS expansion and
enhancement - a. Political commitment with increased and
sustained financing - b. Case detection through quality-assured
bacteriology - c. Standardized treatment, with supervision and
patient support - d. An effective drug supply and management system
- e. Monitoring and evaluation system, and impact
measurement - Address TB/HIV, MDR-TB and other challenges
- a. Implement collaborative TB/HIV activities
- b. Prevent and control MDR-TB
- c. Addressing issues concerning prisoners,
refugees and other high-risk groups and
situations - Contribute to health system strengthening
- a. Actively participate in efforts to improve
system-wide policy, human resources, financing,
management, service delivery and information
systems - b. Share innovations that strengthen systems,
including the Practical Approach to Lung Health
(PAL)
31Components of the strategy and implementation
approaches (Contd.)
- Engage all care providers
- a. Public-Public and Public-Private mix (PPM)
approaches - b. International Standards for Tuberculosis
Care (ISTC) - Empower people with TB and communities
- a. Advocacy, communication and social
mobilization - b. Community participation in TB care
- c. Patients charter for tuberculosis care
- Enable and promote research
- a. Programme-bases operational research
- b. Research to develop new diagnostics, drugs
and vaccines
32Health sectors involved in RNTCP
- Medical colleges
- Task forces, Core committees in colleges
established - 230 medical colleges involved
- Other Central government departments/PSUs
- Railways, ESI, Mining, Shipping
- NGOs
- More than 2000 NGOs involved
- Private Practitioners
- More than 12,000 private practitioners involved
- Corporate sector
- Nearly 120 corporate houses involved
- Coal India, Tea industry, Steel/Aluminium plants
33Factors influencing nosocomial transmission of
tuberculosis among HCWs
- Related to the health care facility
- Level of exposure
- High vs low exposure areas
- Inadequate isolation of infected patients
- Ennvironmetal
- Inadequate sanitation
- Inappropriate disposal of excreta
- Overcrowding in the wards
- Poor ventilation
- Host factors related to HCWs
- Immune status of an individual
- Co-morbid illnesses
- BCG vaccination status
- General clinical factors
- Delayed suspicion and diagnosis
- Delayed initiation of treatment
34Measures used for control of tuberculosis
transmission in health care workers
- General infection control measures
- Reduction of environmental load by reducing the
release of mycobacteria - Use of masks for patients
- Isolation rooms
- Preventing environmental spread
- Negative pressure rooms
- Use of HEPA filters
- Use of ultraviolet radiation
- Individual protection measures
- Inhalation prevention strategies
- Use of simple masks
- Use of respirators HEPA filters/PAPR
- BCG vaccination
- Chemoprophylaxis
- Early detection and treatment
- (HEPA high efficiency particulate air PAPR
powered air purifying respirator)
35Suggested algorithm for early detection of
tuberculosis in HCWs in resource limited
settings
- Annual screening of HCWs with a
symptom-questionnaire - TB Suspect (any HCW with respiratory and/or
constitutional symptoms, - not explained by a definitive alternative cause)
- Sputum smear for AFB X3
- Positive
Negative - Treat as smear-positive TB Chest X-ray
- Suggestive of TB
Not suggestive of TB - -Treat as smear-negative TB TST/IGRAs
- Consider bronchoscopy BAL
- fluid examination for AFB Positive
Negative
36Prevention of non-tuberculous mycobacteria disease
- Health care-associated NTM disease
- Avoid exposure of injection sites, intravenous
catheters and surgical wounds and tap water
derived fluid - Avoid cleaning of endoscopes with tap water
- Avoid contamination of clinical specimens with
tap water and ice - Disseminated MAIC disease
- Patients with AIDS (CD4 T-lymphocyte count lt 50
cells/?l) or Clarithromycin 100 mg/day or
Rifabutin 300 mg/day (less well tolerated)
37Control of Bovine TB
- Control/ Eradication program in animals
- Co-ordination with RNTCP
- Treatment with effective drugs
- Pasteurization of milk
- Advances in sanitation and hygiene
- Sustained cooperation of national and private
veterinary services, meat inspectors, and farmers
for successful conduct of a test-and-slaughter
policy, as well as adequate compensation for
services etc.
38Treatment of Bovine TB
- Innate resistance to Pyrazinamide
- Treatment with 2 or 3 drugs (H,R,E and S) for
9-12 months - Standard SCC 2HRZE, 4RH
(ODonahue et al (ARRD, 1974) - DOTS strategy Not clearly defined. But type of
mycobacteria is not distinguished in RNTCP. -
39Summary
- India is the highest TB-burden country.
- Nationwide DOTS-coverage is achieved after a
phase of unprecedented rapid expansion of DOTS. - With reference to the global targets, the
Treatment-success has exceeded and case-detection
is close. - A wide range of initiatives beyond basic DOTS
services have been implemented - The challenge ahead is to sustain good quality
services over the next few decades in order to
achieve TB control - Bovine TB is being recognized as an important
cause in humans in specific patient populations. - Control programs for bovine and human TB
should coordinate for an effective implementation.
40Thank You