# Integrating Early Tuberculosis States Into Contact Management in Peru

**Authors:** Qi Tan, Chuan-Chin Huang, Alicia Madden, Megan B. Murray

PMC · DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.25207 · 2025-08-06

## TL;DR

A study in Peru finds that treating early tuberculosis with chest X-rays is more effective than standard preventive therapy, especially for younger people, but comes with more risks for older adults.

## Contribution

The study introduces a decision model showing that CR-guided treatment for early TB is more effective than universal preventive therapy in high-burden settings.

## Key findings

- CR-guided treatment reduced TB cases by 71-81%, outperforming universal preventive therapy.
- Treating younger household contacts with CR-guided strategies reduced TB cases with fewer adverse events.
- Expanding treatment to older adults increased serious adverse events despite reducing TB cases.

## Abstract

In settings with high tuberculosis (TB) burden, should a household contact management strategy using chest radiograph (CR)–guided treatment of early TB be favored over universal TB preventive therapy as recommended by the World Health Organization?

In this decision analytical model based on 12 767 household contacts in Lima, Peru, CR-guided identification and treatment of early TB with a regimen for TB disease was more effective than universal TB preventive therapy, although it was associated with more serious adverse events, particularly among older adults.

These findings suggest that CR-guided treatment for early TB is preferable for children and young adults in high-burden settings, with cautious consideration of serious adverse event risk in older populations.

This decision analytical model evaluates strategies for managing household contacts of patients with tuberculosis (TB) who have abnormal chest radiograph findings but do not meet clinical criteria for TB disease.

Tuberculosis (TB) is now understood to exist on a spectrum from TB infection to active TB disease. While World Health Organization guidelines target TB infection and TB disease, they overlook individuals with early TB in the middle of this spectrum.

To evaluate chest radiograph (CR)–guided screening strategies among household contacts (HHCs) of patients with TB in a high-burden setting.

This decision analytical model was constructed from June 1 to November 31, 2024. Community-based care in an environment with high TB burden and limited resources was used as the setting in Lima, Peru. Participants included a hypothetical cohort of 1000 HHCs with positive results of a tuberculin skin test and negative results of a sputum culture who were cleared of TB disease based on a clinician’s evaluation. The hypothetical cohort was based on the clinical and demographic features of a cohort studied between September 1, 2009, and August 29, 2012.

Strategy 1 included CR screening to rule out TB disease followed by TB preventive therapy for all; strategy 2, CR screening with treatment for TB disease for those with abnormal CR findings and TB preventive therapy for those without; and strategy 3, observation without pharmacological intervention. We modeled 6 intervention scenarios by applying strategies 1 and 2 to the entire HHC population, to HHCs younger than 35 years, and to HHCs younger than 19 years (Peru’s national TB policy).

TB cases averted, serious adverse events (SAEs), and drug resistance.

A simulated cohort of 1000 HHCs with age and clinical status distributions was based on a previously published cohort of 12 767 TB HHCs in Lima, Peru. Of these, 7661 (60.0%) were male, 4212 (33.0%) were younger than 15 years, and 444 (3.4%) developed TB during 1 year of follow-up. Strategy 2 applied to all HHCs reduced TB cases by 71% to 81%, outperforming strategy 1 applied to all HHCs, which reduced cases by 49% to 69%. Strategy 2 reduced acquired isoniazid resistance but increased SAEs. When both strategies were restricted to HHCs younger than 19 years, strategy 2 reduced TB cases by 42% to 50%. Expanding treatment to older adults further reduced cases but also increased SAEs (19-22 additional SAEs).

In this model of TB HHC management, CR-guided identification and treatment of early TB was more effective than universal isoniazid preventive therapy, especially in children and young adults. Trade-offs between benefit and harm must be carefully considered in older adults.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** tuberculosis (MONDO:0018076), TB (MONDO:0018076)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HHC (MESH:C537145), TB (MESH:D014376), isoniazid resistance (MESH:D060467)
- **Chemicals:** isoniazid (MESH:D007538)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12329612/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12329612