Author(s):
Barreto, Mauricio Lima ; Pereira, Susan M. ; Dourado, Maria Inês Costa ; Bierrenbach, Ana Luiza de Souza ; Cunha, Sérgio Souza da ; Ichihara, Maria Y. ; Brito, Silvana Castro de ; Rodrigues, Laura C. ; Barreto, Mauricio Lima ; Pereira, Susan M. ; Dourado, Maria Inês Costa ; Bierrenbach, Ana Luiza de Souza ; Cunha, Sérgio Souza da ; Ichihara, Maria Y. ; Brito, Silvana Castro de ; Rodrigues, Laura C.
Date: 2014
Origin: Oasisbr
Subject(s): Tuberculosis; BCG vaccine; Tuberculin test; Immunization programs; Brazil
Description
Texto completo: acesso restrito. p. 285-293
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Made available in DSpace on 2014-01-06T15:03:43Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Maurício L. Barreto.pdf: 161477 bytes, checksum: 4a6b8ca92d47365c60575155cb5639fd (MD5) Previous issue date: 2003
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the influence of BCG vaccination or revaccination on tuberculin skin test reactivity, in order to guide the correct interpretation of this test in a setting of high neonatal BCG vaccination coverage and an increasing BCG revaccination coverage at school age. METHODS: We conducted tuberculin skin testing and BCG scar reading in 1148 children aged 7–14 years old in the city of Salvador, Bahia, Brazil. We measured the positive effect of the presence of one or two BCG scars on the proportion of tuberculin skin test results above different cut-off levels (induration sizes of > 5 mm, > 10 mm, and > 15 mm) and also using several ranges of induration size (0, 1–4, 5–9, 10–14, and > 15 mm). We also measured the effects that age, gender, and the school where the child was enrolled had on these proportions. RESULTS: The proportion of tuberculin results > 10 mm was 14.2% (95% confidence interval (CI) = 8.0%–20.3%) for children with no BCG scar, 21.3% (95% CI = 18.5%–24.1%) for children with one BCG scar, and 45.0% (95% CI = 32.0%–58.0%) for children with two BCG scars. There was evidence for an increasing positive effect of the presence of one and two BCG scars on the proportion of results > 5 mm and > 10 mm. Similarly, there was evidence for an increasing positive effect of the presence of one and two scars on the proportion of tuberculin skin test results in the ranges of 5–9 mm and of 10–14 mm. The BCG scar effect on the proportion of results > 5 mm and > 10 mm did not vary with age. There was no evidence for BCG effect on the results > 15 mm. CONCLUSIONS: In Brazilian schoolchildren, BCG-induced tuberculin reactivity is indistinguishable, for results under 15 mm, from reactivity induced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. BCG revaccination at school age increases the degree of BCG-induced tuberculin reactivity found among schoolchildren. This information should be taken into account in tuberculin skin test surveys intended to estimate M. tuberculosis prevalence or to assess transmission patterns as well as in tuberculin skin testing of individuals used as an auxiliary tool in diagnosing tuberculosis. Taking this information into consideration is especially important when there is increasing BCG revaccination coverage.