The Hidden Epidemic: Post-Release Tuberculosis Risk in Formerly Incarcerated Populations
Megan Murray, Chuan-Chin Huang, Meredith Brooks, Mercedes Becerra, Roger Calderon, Carmen Contreras, Judith Jimenez, Leonid Lecca, Alicia Madden, Rosa Yataco, Zibiao Zhang

TL;DR
Formerly incarcerated people in Peru have higher tuberculosis risk and worse outcomes, suggesting prisons contribute to TB spread.
Contribution
This study reveals that incarceration is a significant risk factor for TB that persists after release.
Findings
Incarcerated individuals had more severe TB and worse treatment outcomes.
Former prisoners were more likely to be diagnosed with TB within two years of release.
Household contacts with incarceration histories had higher TB infection rates.
Abstract
Incarcerated populations face an extremely high risk of tuberculosis (TB), yet little is known about whether this elevated risk persists after release into the community. Among 3,666 TB patients aged ≤ 60 years enrolled in a prospective cohort study in Lima, Peru, 188 (5%) reported a history of incarceration. These individuals presented with more severe disease (mean score difference = 0.25) and had a higher risk of a poor treatment outcome compared to those who had not been incarcerated (risk ratio [RR] = 2.17). Among 138 with known incarceration dates, nearly three-quarters (73%) were diagnosed within two years of release, suggesting that infections were acquired while in prison. Among 7,101 household contacts aged 15–60 years, 121 (1.7%) had a history of incarceration and these had a higher prevalence of TB infection (prevalence risk ratio [PRR] = 1.33). The prevalence risk was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology
