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Tuberculosis (TB) among Travelers Arriving into the United States, 2006-2009 William L. Jackson, MD, PhD, MSPH, MA CAPT, Commissioned Corps, U.S. Public Health Service Quarantine and Border Health Services Branch Division of Global Migration and Quarantine 2011 USPHS Scientific and Training Symposium: New Orleans, LA National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases Division of Global Migration and Quarantine Presentation Overview • Outline the distribution of TB in the United States and globally with respect to travelers who are infectious with TB • Report on travelers who are infectious with TB as documented using the CDC Quarantine Activity Reporting System (QARS) Geographic Distribution of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) TB Cases, United States, 1993-2008 Overall TB rate: 4.2 per 100,000 FB 20.6/100K US 2.1/100K Div. TB Elimination (CDC/OID/NCHHSTP) : www.cdc.gov/tb/topic/research/TBESC TB Case Count and Rate* Among U.S.- and Foreign-born Persons, by Year — United States, 1993–2010 22 45 No. of TB cases among U.S.-born persons No. of TB cases among foreign-born persons TB rate among U.S.-born persons TB rate among foreign-born persons Overall nationa TB rate 18 16 40 35 30 14 12 25 10 20 8 15 6 10 4 2 5 0 0 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 Year * Per 100,000 population. Data are updated as of Feb 26, 2011 and are provisional. 2003 2005 2007 2009 Rate Number (in thousands) 20 Foreign-born US Residents Reported with TB in United States -- 2009 Countries of Origin Age Distributions >65 yrs (20%) Philippines (12%) <15 yrs (6%) 15–24 yrs (11%) 45–64 yrs (30%) www.cdc.gov/tb/topic/research/TBESC 25–44 yrs (34%) Quarantine Activity Reporting System (QARS) • Secure Web-based system used to track diseases of public health interest and activities at CDC Quarantine Stations: – – – – – – Reports of ill and deceased passengers Inspections of passengers, cargo, and conveyances Monitoring shipments of nonhuman primate & drugs Immigrant and refugee processing Partnership activities: diseases of public health interest Other • Administrative log of CDC and partner responses to travel-related events or incidents CDC Quarantine Stations by Jurisdictions Field offices for responding to and documenting illness in travelers AK ME Minneapolis Seattle Chicago Anchorage WA ND MT Detroit MN OR VT ID MD DE WY IA NE No.CA IN IL UT CO VA OK AZ Los Angeles Dallas Philadelphia Washington, D.C. NC TN So.CA Newark WV KY MO KS New York OH NV San Francisco CT NJ PA SD Boston MA RI NY MI WI NH SC AR Atlanta NM North TX MS AL GA San Diego El Paso West TX East TX LA FL Houston Miami Honolulu GU PR HI CDC Quarantine Stations San Juan QARS Report Types for Diseases of Public Health Interest •Illness reported during travel •Illness reported after travel completed •Death reported during travel •Land border crossing •Other information Diseases of Public Health Interest Quarantinable* Smallpox, Cholera, Plague, Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers, Infectious Tuberculosis, Yellow Fever, Diphtheria, SARS, Novel Influenza Virus (pandemic potential) Public Health Concern (examples) * Executive Order 13375: Revised List of Quarantinable Communicable Diseases, President George W. Bush, April 1, 2005 Rabies, malaria, dengue, measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, meningococcal, zoonotic poxvirus, polio, legionellosis, pertussis Objectives • Review of analysis methodology for tuberculosis surveillance • Reports on TB in travelers documented using the CDC Quarantine Activity Reporting System (QARS) • Characteristics and trends of travelers with infectious TB • Baselines and trend changes for TB reporting METHODOLOGY Tuberculosis Surveillance Definitions in the CDC Quarantine Activity Reporting System (QARS) Major QARS Report Categories for Travel-Related TB Surveillance Sea Air Land Before Travel During Travel After Travel Illness reported prior to initiation of transit Illness/death reported while person in transit Illness reported after person reached final destination American Thoracic Society (ATS) CDC TB-Classification System Tuberculosis Status • No TB exposure • TB exposure • Latent TB infection • Active TB disease • Clinically inactive TB • TB suspect TB-Class: † No-active (inactive) Stage Class 0† Class 1† Class 2† Class 3‡ Class 4† Class 5* ‡Active *Temporary(deleted) QARS Tuberculosis Report Confirmation Clinical criteria Laboratory criteria Confirmation requires direct or indirect evidence of ALL clinical elements in QARS records Clinical criteria = all below Clinical (AFB+) specimen MTB complex detection by nucleic acid amplification (NAA) OR culture Lab criteria = any below Acid-fast bacilli (AFB+) sputum smear Chest x-ray Medical exam TB skin test Anti-TB therapy Culture Nucleic acid amplification Selected Timelines • QARS activated and current CDC Quarantine Station configurations set by end 2005 • Analysis dates 01JAN2006 - 31DEC2009 permit multiple end point analysis – Yearly trends between traveler demographics – Monthly comparisons for TB activity class – Contrast of pre/post-effects and comparisons for 2007 media events on TB(+) traveler(s) • Time segments permit use of USDoT BTS travel statistics to estimate rates (denominators) TB in Travelers Arriving in US: Analysis Methods 2006-09 Record extraction from QARS 552,759 QARS Entries 104,530 Illness Reports 6,596 TB-related Reports Record rev iew • 949 reports met TB case definition after medical officer review Categorize • SAS text-searc h with Medic al Offic er duplic ate c hec ks Classif y • 873 TB-c ases met Americ an Thorac ic Soc iety definitions • Medic al Offic er c onsultation with Q-Stations or health departments Analyze • Confirmation reviews for report c ase definition assignment • Epi-info 3. 5 analysis and evaluations RESULTS Tuberculosis Surveillance Annual Volume of QARS TB Reports compared with Traveler Volumes, 2006-2009 (N=873) 300 80 70 250 200 Case Reports 50 150 40 30 100 20 50 10 0 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 Years Active No-Active US-Inbound Traveler Vol. * *Source: Bureau of Travel Statistics (BTS) of the US Department of Transportation Traveler Volume x 106 60 Active-TB Case Reports in relation to Travel, 2006-2009 (N=949) 400 350 300 TB-Case Reports 250 200 150 100 50 0 Before Travel During Travel Years 2006 2007 After Travel 2008 2009 Agency Sources for TB Reporting to CDC Quarantine Stations, 2006-2009 (N=949) Time Periods Before Travel During Travel After Travel Federal US Customs* Travel industry Health Dept. Care Provider International Other *US Customs = CBP of US DHS, Federal = all US Government agencies excluding CBP Comparison: TB and Other Illness Reports, 2006-2009 No-Active TB Active TB (Class 3) QARS Illness Reports 50 45 800 Novel H1N1 TB(+) Traveler Media Event 700 40 600 500 TB-Reports 30 25 400 20 300 15 200 10 100 5 0 0 Month TB infected travelers recorded in QARS Illness Reports 01JAN2006-31DEC2009 QARS Illness Reports 35 Countries of Origin for Persons Reported with TB in United States Passport Proportions by country of origin travelers with TB recorded in QARS: 2006-2009 Mexico (13%) Philippines (10%) Other Countries (58%) India (8%) (1.5%) Ethiopia/Kenya Pakistan China (4%) Vietnam (3%) Korea (2%) Countries of citizenship for non US-citizens with TB reported in QARS, 2006-2009 80 70 60 C A S E S 50 40 Active Non-Active 30 20 10 0 COUNTRIES TB infected travelers recorded in QARS Illness Reports 01JAN2006-31DEC2009 Countries of Origin for Persons Reported with TB in United States Travelers recorded in QARS 2006-09 Foreign-born US Residents 2009 Mexico (13%) Philippines (10%) Other Countries (58%) Philippines (12%) www.cdc.gov/tb/topic/research/TBESC India (8%) China (4%) Vietnam (3%) Korea (2%) (1.5%) Ethiopia/Kenya/Pakistan QARS TB Reports, by Age: 2006-09 Foreign-born US Residents 2009 >65 yrs (20%) 45–64 yrs (30%) Travelers recorded in QARS 2006-09 <15 yrs <15 yrs (6%) 15–24 yrs (11%) 25–44 yrs (34%) http://www.cdc.gov/tb/topic/research/TBESC (3%) >65 yrs (16%) 15–24 yrs (16%) 45–64 yrs (25%) 25–44 yrs (40%) Ratios and Rates of Total TB Reporting to CDC Quarantine Stations, 2006-2009 Monthly 2006 2007 2008 2009 TB Reports per 100 6.67 QARS Illness Reports [3.31] 13.74 [7.44] 15.44 [5.67] 8.97 [5.73] TB Reports per 1.17 Million Air Trave le rs [0.47] 2.51 [1.56] 3.17 [0.99] *3.22 [0.63] M ean [Std. D eviation] *p < 0.001 (F-tes t) Rates of Total TB Reporting to CDC Quarantine Stations, 2006-2009 Monthly Jan 06-May 07 Jun 07-Dec 09 TB Re ports pe r 100 QARS Illne ss Re ports 5.4 [2.6] *9.3 [4.7] TB Reports per Million Air Travelers 1.18 [0.45] **3.18 [0.78] M ean [Std. D eviation] *p < 0.001 **p < 0.001 (F-test) Monthly TB Report Trends for Active v. Non-active Cases, Adjusted for Travel Volume 3 2.5 Cases per Traveler x 106 Active Slope1 p < 0.10 2 1.5 Rate-Active Rate-Non 1 Non-Active 0.5 Slope2 p < 0.01 0 0 10 20 TB(+) Traveler Media Event 2006 2007 30 MONTHS 40 2008 50 60 2009 Summary • Countries of citizenship for travelers with TB reported in QARS consistent with – WHO estimates of TB incidence by country – TB in foreign-born US residents • TB-reporting to CDC Quarantine Stations increased significantly after high-profile media events in May 2007 – Sustained for Active TB disease > inactive disease – Difference persisted into 2009 Limitations • QARS functions as a passive surveillance system for communicable diseases – Reliant on reportage of partners outside of CDC – Reflects only fractions of actual infected travelers • Passports act as surrogates to traveler countries-of-origin – Unable to precisely discern microbial origins – Unable to discern any episodes of microbial transmission Conclusions • Majority of TB cases reported in QARS were active pulmonary disease • Majority of all TB cases reports came from state or local public health partners after travel completed • Increased TB-reporting rates after 2007 may reflect enhanced Federal, State and local public health surveillance partnerships for infectious TB in travelers • Sustained growth in pre-travel reports from public health partners (2008-09) likely reflect the institution of a public health “Do Not Board” program by CDC Next Steps • Conduct further evaluation to characterize high-risk travelers who are not included in current pre-travel screening systems (e.g. , students, temporary workers) • Additional analyses will establish baseline TB report rates and inform strategies to control TB in travelers and prevent spread to US communities Acknowledgments Division of Global Migration and Quarantine and Quarantine Station Officers Daniel Fishbein Nina Marano Brian Miars An Nguyen LaTonia Richardson Chris Schembri Ciji Adams Francisco Alvarado-Ramy Kirsten Buckley Peter Houck Tonyka Jackson Curi Kim Laura Leidel Brian Schmidt Paige Szymanowski Questions? William L. Jackson, MD, PhD, MSPH, MA CAPT, U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps For more information please contact Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333 Telephone, 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)/TTY: 1-888-232-6348 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.cdc.gov The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases Division of Global Migration and Quarantine International Health Regulations (June,2007) • Global agreements about procedures to protect public health • Adopted at the World Health Assembly & binding on all WHO’s Member States (unless they reject or reserve) • Legal language in a document containing 66 articles and 9 annexes • Supported by technical (compliance) guidelines www.who.int/ihr/en/ Illness Reports in QARS, 2010 (N=2,003) Illness Frequency (%) H1N1/ILI 252 (31) Varicella 195 (24) Tuberculosis 171 (21) Mumps 31 (4) Measles 30 (4) Malaria 27 (3) Pertussis 22 (3) Dengue fever 18 (2) Typhoid fever 16 (2) Cholera 12 (1) Meningococcal 12 (1) Hepatitis 16 (1) Legionnaires’ disease 9 (1) YEAR Female Active TB Female Inactive TB Male Active TB Male Inactive TB 2006 27 8 44 18 2007 47 31 99 49 2008 102 34 99 49 29 11.7% 40.7 [20.7] 105 39.7% 43.6 [18.2] 53 19.3% 41.2 [18.0] 2009 79 Pct(+)TB 29.2% MeanAge 40.9 [StdDev] [19.3] TOTALS (Pct. Male) N=873 97 (63.9%) 226 (65.5%) 284 (52.1%) 266 (59.4%) 100% 42.1 [18.7] Chi-square: GENDER=6.3370(df 3 )p<0.0963; F-statistic=3.229: T-Statistic=1.797(df 1) p<0. 0728 TB Cases reported in QARS, by age, 2006-2009 MTB Observe Mean Disease d Age Cases Female Active Male Active Female Non-Active Male Non-Active Std Dev 241 40.9 19.3 380 43.6 18.2 94 40.7 20.7 165 41.2 18.0 F-statistic = 3.2291: T-Statistic = 1.7970 (GENDER) = 6.3370 (df 1) p<0. 0728 Major QARS Report Categories for TB Surveillance • Illness Reported During Travel – Ill individual reported before s/he reached final destination – Individuals who are currently on a conveyance (airplane, cruise ship, etc) at a port or otherwise in transit • • • • Illness Reported After Travel Completed Death Reported During Travel Land Border Crossing Other Information Major QARS Report Categories for TB Surveillance • Illness Reported During Travel • Illness Reported After Travel Completed – Ill individual reported after s/he reached his/her final destination for a leg of a trip – Frequently but not always a residence • Death Reported During Travel • Land Border Crossing • Other Information Major QARS Report Categories for TB Surveillance • • • • • Illness Reported During Travel Illness Reported After Travel Completed Death Reported During Travel Land Border Crossing Other Information – Captures activities or events that do not fit prior report types – Examples: Before Travel Illness, public health Do Not Board and Lookout Lists, Foreign Notification of Case/Contact, Human Remains Modi, et al; Clin. Inf. Dis. 2009:49 885 1 June 2006 – 31 May2008 TB Reports by Quarantine Station, 2006-09 2006 mean