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Recent
Articles
Geng E, Kreiswirth B, Driver C, Li J, Burzynski J, DellaLatta P,
LaPaz A, Schluger NW.
Changes in the transmission of tuberculosis in New York
City from 1990 to 1999.
N Engl J Med 2002 May 9;346(19):1453-8
PMID: 12000815
BACKGROUND: Over the past decade, there has been a reduction in
the incidence of tuberculosis in New York City and in the United
States. However, the reduction has been confined mainly to U.S.-born
persons. Understanding the reasons for the lack of reduction among
non-U.S.-born persons may lead to new strategies for tuberculosis
control. METHODS: We performed DNA fingerprinting with the IS6110
insertion sequence of the organisms isolated from patients with
culture-positive tuberculosis in northern Manhattan from 1990 to
1999. The goal was to identify the strains responsible for multiple
infections, presumably through recent transmission (clusters of
cases), as well as the strains found in only one patient, presumably
representing reactivation of latent infection. RESULTS: Of 546 available
isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, 261 (48 percent) belonged
to a cluster and 285 (52 percent) did not. In multivariate analysis,
significant predictors of noncluster status included birth outside
the United States (odds ratio for a strain causing a cluster among
non-Hispanic foreign-born patients, 0.31; 95 percent confidence
interval, 0.14 to 0.66; odds ratio among Hispanic foreign-born patients,
0.51; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.30 to 0.88), age greater
than 60 years (odds ratio, 0.37), and diagnosis after 1993 (odds
ratio, 0.50). All these characteristics appeared to be associated
with reactivation disease rather than with tuberculosis due to recent
transmission. Homelessness was associated with clustering (odds
ratio, 1.78; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.99 to 3.20) and therefore
with recent transmission. CONCLUSIONS: These findings from northern
Manhattan suggest that among foreign-born persons, tuberculosis
is largely caused by reactivation of latent infection, whereas among
U.S.-born persons, many cases result from recent transmission. Strategies
for the control and elimination of tuberculosis among foreign-born
persons at high risk should be directed toward the treatment of
latent tuberculosis infection.

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