# Comprehensive tuberculosis screening and preventive treatment in schools and congregate settings of India (2017–2024): a prospective study

**Authors:** Kunchok Dorjee, Sonam Topgyal, Rajesh K. Sood, Tenzin Namdon, Ravinder Kumar, Ugen Gyatso, Jigme Kalsang, Tenzin Thinley, Tenzin Dechen, Tenzin Tsomo, Tenzin Kalsang, Rachel C. Sadoff, Sangyal Dorjee, Sheriza Baksh, Tenzin Yangkyi, Tenzin Khachoe, Tenzin Dolker, Tsering Wangmo, Dekyi Lhadon, Lobsang Tsering, Amita Gupta, Robert C. Bollinger, Jonathan E. Golub, Vidya Mave, Sourya Shrestha, Zorba Paster, Richard E. Chaisson, Tsetan D. Sadutshang

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.lansea.2026.100725 · 2026-02-06

## TL;DR

A comprehensive TB screening and treatment program in Indian schools significantly reduced TB incidence and infection rates over seven years.

## Contribution

Demonstrates real-world effectiveness of TB screening and preventive treatment in high-risk communities.

## Key findings

- TB incidence dropped 83% from 2017 to 2024 in the program.
- Tuberculosis infection prevalence decreased by 32% over the same period.
- Schoolchildren receiving TPT had an 82% lower TB risk.

## Abstract

Existing Tuberculosis (TB) elimination strategies show limited impact, with suboptimal uptake of tuberculosis preventive treatment (TPT) and increasing TB incidence after the COVID-19 pandemic. Real-world evidence on reduction of tuberculosis in high-burden communities is needed to inform future TB elimination strategies.

Since 2017, a comprehensive TB screening and TPT program known as Zero TB in Kids (ZTBK) was implemented in congregate settings of Tibetan communities in India. TB disease, TB infection (TBI), tuberculin skin test (TST) conversion, and TPT uptake were measured periodically.

Schoolchildren and adults in 63 institutes (n = 20,068; 67,637 person-years) were screened. TPT was given to 3847 participants. TB incidence decreased 83% between 2017 [576 (95% CI: 455–718)/100,000] and 2024 [97 (47–179)/100,000]. TB infection (TBI) prevalence decreased 32% between 2017 [22% (95% CI: 21–23%)] and 2024 [15.5% (14–17%)]. TB incidence (640/100,000) and TBI prevalence (28%) were higher in the institutes that were never screened before under ZTBK. Among participants who did not receive TPT, TB disease prevalence decreased 84% between 2017 [910 (95% CI: 675–1204)/100,000] and 2024 [147 (48–343)/100,000], indicating a herd benefit. After one round of TB screening and TPT, between 2018 and 2019, TST conversion decreased 59% for children and 47% for adolescents. Risk of TBI was greater for males (aPR: 1.23; 95% CI: 1.16–1.30). TB risk was 82% lower for schoolchildren receiving TPT. Participants with seizure disorder [aPR: 0.31 (95% CI: 0.15–0.65)] and hepatitis B [0.71 (0.6–0.84)] were less likely to receive TPT.

Significant reduction of TB transmission and burden can be achieved using the existing tools of TB control. Surveillance of TBI and TPT must be widely adopted for schools and congregate settings with high TB burden.

10.13039/100000002National Institutes of Health-10.13039/100000060National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) (K01-AI148583), STOP TB Partnership (STBP/TBREACH/GSA/W7-7692), NIAID-Johns Hopkins Center for AIDS Research (90100777), Foundations, and Philanthropy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Tuberculosis (MONDO:0018076), hepatitis B (MONDO:0005344)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Infectious Diseases (MESH:D003141), TB (MESH:D014376), AIDS (MESH:D000163), hepatitis B (MESH:D006509), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382), seizure disorder (MESH:D004827)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12907724/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12907724