Veille documentaire MTPH

Médecine du travail du personnel hospitalier

Repeat IGRA Testing in Canadian Health Workers: Conversions or Unexplained Variability?

Auteur     Alice Zwerling
Auteur     Andrea Benedetti
Auteur     Mihaela Cojocariu
Auteur     Fiona McIntosh
Auteur     Filomena Pietrangelo
Auteur     Marcel A Behr
Auteur     Kevin Schwartzman
Auteur     Dick Menzies
Auteur     Madhukar Pai
Résumé     BACKGROUND Although North American hospitals are switching from tuberculin testing (TST) to interferon-gamma release assays (IGRAs), data are limited on the association between occupational exposure and serial QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube (QFT) results in healthcare workers (HCWs). METHODS In a cohort of Canadian HCWs, TST and QFT were performed at study enrolment (TST1 and QFT1) and 1 year later (TST2 and QFT2). Conversion and reversion rates were estimated, and correlation with TB exposure was assessed. RESULTS Among 258 HCWs, median age was 36.8 years, 188/258 (73%) were female and 183/258 (71%) were Canadian-born. In 245 subjects with a negative QFT1 we found a QFT conversion rate of 5.3% (13/245, 95% CI 2.9-8.9%). Using more stringent definitions, QFT conversion rates ranged from 2.0 to 5.3%. No TST conversions were found among the 241 HCWs with negative TST1, and no measure of recent TB exposure was associated with QFT conversions. In the 13 HCWs with a positive QFT1, 62% reverted. CONCLUSION Using the conventional QFT conversion definition, we found a higher than expected rate of conversion. Recent occupational exposures were not associated with QFT conversions, and no TST conversions occurred in this cohort, suggesting the ‘conversions’ may not reflect new TB infection.
Publication     PloS one
Volume     8
Numéro     1
Pages     e54748
Date     2013

Export bibliographique

Chercher cette référence sur : Google Scholar, Worldcat

doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0054748

Laisser une réponse

Vous devez etre connectez Pour poster un commentaire