Reducing tuberculosis transmission by genotype-based contact tracing coupled with public health containment measures: a case study during the COVID-19 pandemic in Taiwan
Yuan-Shan Chien, Chao-Chih Lai, Chen-Yang Hsu, Yu-Chu Hsieh, Shin-Yi Lin, Hsiao Chi Wang, Hung-pin Chen, Tony Hsiu-His Chen, Dih-Ling Luh, Yen-Po Yeh

TL;DR
This study shows that combining genetic tracing with public health measures during the pandemic reduced tuberculosis spread in Taiwan.
Contribution
A novel genotype-based contact tracing method was used to estimate TB transmission reduction during the pandemic.
Findings
An 81% reduction in TB transmission was observed during the first two years of the pandemic.
Genotype-based contact tracing combined with public health measures significantly reduced TB cluster cases.
The approach could help moderate-burden TB countries reach WHO End TB targets by 2035.
Abstract
This study aimed to estimate the effectiveness of genotype-based contact tracing coupled with public health and social containment measures (PHSMs) in reducing tuberculosis (TB) transmission during the COVID-19 pandemic. Patients suspicious of recent TB infection from index cases were traced by genotyping method between 2017 and 2021. To make allowance for TB cases attributed to reactivation, TB cases identified from the genotype-based contact tracing group were compared to those from the underlying population via the notifiable nationwide system without genotyping. The relative changes (ratios) in TB cases before and during the pandemic between the two groups were leveraged to estimate the effectiveness of PHSMs following genotype-based contact tracing, taking into account demographic features and geographic variation, with a multivariable Poisson regression model. Before the pandemic,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Respiratory viral infections research · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections
