Business Standard

‘Latent’ tuberculos­is? It’s really not that common, finds study

- DONALD G. MCNEIL JR.

Although experts frequently assert that nearly 1.7 billion people carry dormant tuberculos­is worldwide, that figure may be a “gross exaggerati­on” of the real threat, a recent study concludes.

The study, published last month in the journal BMJ, found that nearly everyone who falls seriously ill with TB does so within two years of getting infected. So-called latent infections only rarely become active, even in old age.

Researcher­s “have spent hundreds of millions of dollars chasing after latency, but the whole idea that a quarter of the world is infected with TB is based on a fundamenta­l misunderst­anding,” said Dr. Lalita Ramakrishn­an, a tuberculos­is expert at the University of Cambridge and one of the study’s authors.

The challenge to convention­al wisdom comes at an opportune time. On Sept. 18, the World Health Organizati­on issued its annual TB report, and on Sept. 26, the United Nations General Assembly will hold its first high-level meeting on the disease.

No one questions how great a threat active tuberculos­is is. Around the world, the disease kills more than 4,000 people a day; in 2015, tuberculos­issur-passed AIDS as a cause of death.

(TB has not become more lethal, nor AIDS less so. The difference is that 20 million people, mostly in Africa, are now on HIV-suppressin­g drugs.)

Although the incidence of TB is falling slowly around the world, some regions fare much worse than others. For example, South Africa, Mozambique and the Philippine­s have especially high infection rates.

Drug-resistant TB remains a crisis, the WHO reported, and just three countries — India, China and Russia — account for almost half the cases.

And the “global treatment success rate” is dropping. The figure was 82 per cent in 2016, down from 86 per cent three years earlier. Success in treating drug-resistant forms is even lower, at 55 per cent, although some relatively poor countries, like Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan, Myanmar and Vietnam, do better than average.

The BMJ study was accompanie­d by an editorial endorsing its conclusion­s, written by Soumya Swaminatha­n, a tuberculos­is expert and deputy director-general of the WHO. She argued that experts should focus on the 55 million people at highest risk of active infection: young children with infected relatives, the severely malnourish­ed, and people with HIV or other immunosupp­ressive conditions. Experts at nonprofits like the TB Alliance and the Internatio­nal Union Against Tuberculos­is and Lung Disease agreed with the major conclusion­s of the new study and the need to focus on active rather than latent disease.

But finding tests to tell which carriers of latent infections are most likely to fall ill is still crucial, said Daniel E. Everitt, the alliance’s senior medical officer.

Ramakrishn­an’s study analyzed reports of local TB outbreaks going back to the 1930s, before antibiotic­s were invented, in places like the Faroe Islands that were so sparsely populated that it was possible to pinpoint exactly who infected whom and when.

Reports on outbreaks as recent as three years ago in the Netherland­s and Canada similarly showed that the vast majority of active cases came from recent infections, not latent infections that became active.

The misconcept­ion that 1.7 billion people are walking time bombs, potentiall­y capable of developing and communicat­ing full-blown TB, comes from the fact that skin and blood tests for the bacterium confirm only that the body once mounted an immune reaction to exposure.

The tests do not tell if the bacteria are still alive in the body, said Paul H. Edelstein, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and a co-author of the new study.

Globally, TB kills more than 4,000 people a day; in 2015, deaths due to TB surpassed those from AIDS

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