Tuberculosis -TB
Tuberculosis,
or TB, is a chronic infectious disease caused by a bacterium called
Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
It usually affects the
lungs, but can attack other parts of the body.
TB is a global problem, although
undeveloped countries usually have much higher incidences than developed
countries.
South Africa has one of the
highest reported TB infection rates in the world.
TB is mainly spread by
breathing in air-borne TB bacteria from people with active infectious TB
disease.
A
person can be infected by the TB organism for years without getting sick or
spreading the disease to others.
If your immune system is
weakened for some reason, TB infection can develop into active disease.
Although
TB can be treated, the minimum period required for successful treatment is six
months, and medication must be taken exactly as prescribed.
Failure to complete the treatment
regimen can result in the emergence of drug resistant strains of TB.
In some parts
of the world, such as South Africa, TB is the most important opportunistic
infection of people with HIV.
Description
Tuberculosis, or TB, is a chronic infectious disease caused by bacteria, which
usually attack the lungs (pulmonary TB). The bacteria can destroy parts of the
lungs, making it difficult to breathe. Bacteria can spread to and damage other
parts of the body, such as the digestive and urogenital tracts, bones, joints,
nervous system, lymph nodes and skin. This is called extrapulmonary TB, and is
far less common. The disease is characterized by the development of granulomas
or tubercles in infected tissues.
Prevalence
Worldwide prevalence
The WHO has declared TB a global
emergency: a third of the world's population is infected.
TB
causes over three million deaths annually, making it the infectious disease with
the highest adult mortality rate. It is a bigger killer than AIDS and malaria
combined. More people die of TB now than ever before.
TB accounts for more than a
quarter of all preventable adult deaths in developing countries.
TB is the biggest killer of
young women. Over one million women die from TB annually - more than all causes
of maternal mortality combined.
People of all ages,
nationalities and socio-economic groups can get TB.
Every country is vulnerable
to the consequences of poor TB treatment practices in others.
People with untreated TB
disease will probably infect another 10 to 15 people each year.
TB
is the leading infectious killer of people with HIV/AIDS, accounting for a third
of AIDS deaths. HIV and TB each speed the other's progress.
80 percent of TB sufferers
are in their most economically productive years.
5 - 10 percent of people
infected with TB become sick or infectious.
Factors
that may be contributing to the increase in TB infection are:
Increasing number of AIDS/HIV
cases.
Drug-resistant
TB strains.
Population motility. Global
trade and air travel have increased greatly since 1960. Numbers of refugees and
displaced people have increased nine-fold in 20 years. TB spreads quickly in
crowded refugee camps and shelters. It is difficult to treat mobile populations.
Other displaced people such as homeless people in industrialised countries are
at risk.
Prevalence in South Africa
TB
has reached epidemic proportions in South Africa: the WHO has confirmed that we
have one of the world's worst TB epidemics.
TB
disease rates are up to 60 times higher than in the USA or Western Europe. In
1998 about 180 000 South Africans had TB disease, from which 12 000 died.
SA has the highest reported
infection rate. In the Western Cape the infection rate is about 250 to 300 cases
per 100 000 people.
Nearly half of all TB
patients are HIV-positive.
TB
is the leading infectious killer of youths and adults.
About
two thirds of the population are infected with TB, although most will not get TB
disease.
Cause
TB is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis. TB in the
lungs or throat can be infectious i.e. the bacteria can be spread to other
people. TB in other parts of the body is usually not infectious. TB is spread
mainly through the air. When infectious people cough, sneeze, talk, laugh or
spit, droplets containing bacteria are sprayed into the air. People nearby may
inhale these bacteria and become infected. Bacteria can stay air-borne for a
long time, and can remain active in house dust for weeks. However, transmission
usually occurs only after substantial exposure to someone with active TB. People
with TB disease are most likely to spread it to those they spend time with
daily, such as family members and co-workers. You are unlikely to get TB from
someone coughing in a public place. You cannot get TB from handshakes, toilet
seats, or sharing eating utensils, bedclothes or clothing with people who have
TB.
Infection can also be acquired from contact with an infected cow or through
drinking contaminated milk. However, this is an extremely rare way of getting
TB. Most milk is pasteurized, and dairy herds are usually kept under veterinary
control.
Symptoms
Symptoms
of TB may include the following:
A
cough that starts out dry but later produces sputum (thick liquid from deep
inside the lungs) or blood
Coughing for longer than a
month
Chest pain
Breathing difficulty e.g. shortness of
breath
Weakness or fatigue
Loss of weight and appetite
Chills and fevers (the fever
may be low, and may be intermittent)
Joint
pain
Wheezing
Rales
(additional sounds made to those of normal breathing)
Excessive
sweating, including sweating at night
Hearing loss
Diarrhoea
A
persistent lump or lesion
Clubbing of fingers or toes
- the nails become swollen and feel slightly "pulpy".
Some
people have mild symptoms or none at all. People may therefore spread bacteria
without knowing they have TB.
Course
After inhaling the TB bacteria from the air, they can settle in your
lungs. The bacteria enter via the respiratory mucous membranes and multiply to
form a primary lesion. The main infection site is the lung, but any organ can
become infected if the bacteria spread. They can enter the bloodstream and
lymphatic system and travel to other parts of the body.
The
majority of TB cases are pulmonary. However, TB can also break down bones and
vertebrae, causing sufferers to become hump-backed. A rare form called 'lupus
vulgaris' attacks and disfigures the soft tissue of the face. TB can also attack
the brain as a deadly form of meningitis. Incidence of TB in parts of the body
other than the lungs is higher among people infected with HIV.
Once you
are infected by the TB bacteria, there are essentially two things that can
happen: you may develop active disease; or your body may control the bacteria -
you will be infected, but will not have active TB.
TB Infection (Latency)
It is very important to realise that most people who are infected
with the TB bacteria do not develop active TB. These people therefore have no
symptoms and are not infectious. The immune system controls the infection by
forming walls around the bacteria. This inactivates the bacteria, but does not
kill them. They can lie dormant inside these walls for years. In many people, TB
bacteria remain inactive for a lifetime, but in others, especially those with
weak immune systems, the bacteria may become active and cause active TB disease.
People
with latent TB infection:
Have no symptoms
Do
not feel sick
Cannot spread TB to others
Usually
have a positive skin test reaction (see later)
Can develop TB disease later
if they receive no preventive therapy
TB Disease
TB disease is a serious illness caused by active TB bacteria. It can
either develop when you are first exposed to the TB bacteria, especially if you
have a weak immune system, or it can develop as reactivation disease in people
who have been previously infected. Some people develop TB disease within weeks
of becoming infected: their immune systems are too weak to stop bacterial
growth. Other people may get sick later, when their immune systems become weak
for some reason such as drug abuse, poor nutrition, immune suppression, old age
or ill health. Babies and children often have weak immune systems. TB bacteria
become active if the immune system can't stop their growth; they multiply and
cause disease.
People
with TB disease can be cured if they have proper medical treatment. Without the
correct treatment, however, they may become seriously ill and even die.
Risk Factors
At high
risk for developing active TB include:
People with HIV infection.
Because HIV weakens the
immune system, people with both TB and HIV infection are at high risk of
developing TB disease.
If you are HIV-positive, you
are 30 times more likely to get active TB once infected than someone infected
with TB who is HIV-negative.
People with HIV should be TB
tested and those with a positive skin test should get HIV tested. This way
someone with both infections can take medicine to reduce the chance of
developing TB disease.
Treatment is more difficult and the
disease more resistant to therapy. However, of diseases associated with HIV, TB
is relatively preventable and curable.
Patients
receiving certain medical treatments, such as corticosteroid treatment,
anti-cancer chemotherapy, or transplant anti-rejection medication.
People who have been in
close contact with someone who has infectious TB.
People
who became infected with TB in the last two years.
Babies and young children.
People
who inject drugs.
People with other conditions
that weaken the immune system, especially
Diabetes mellitus
Silicosis
Cancer
of the head or neck
Leukaemia
or Hodgkin's disease
Severe kidney disease
Low body weight
Substance abuse
Elderly people
People
born where TB is common, such as
Africa
, Asia or Latin
America.
Low-income groups with poor
health care access.
People
in residential facilities such as nursing homes and correctional facilities.
People exposed to TB through
their work, such as health care workers.
When to see a doctor
Call a
health professional if:
You have been exposed to TB,
or if symptoms develop.
Symptoms persist despite
treatment.
New symptoms develop.
Diagnosis
You should get tested for TB if you:
Have spent time with someone
with infectious TB
Have HIV infection or
another condition that puts you at high risk for TB disease
Think you might have TB
disease
Are from a country where TB
disease is very common i.e. Africa,
Latin America
, the
Caribbean
and Asia (excluding
Japan)
Inject drugs
Live
where TB disease is common (homeless shelters, hostels, prisons, some nursing
homes)
Tuberculin skin test
A small amount of testing fluid, called tuberculin or PPD, is
injected beneath the skin of your lower arm. Do not rub the injection site. (An
immediate, local inflammatory type reaction may occur. Cold packs or topical
glucocorticoid ointment may relieve discomfort. Allergic reactions have been
reported. Rarely, swelling of lymph nodes may occur. If given to patients with
TB, a severe reaction may occur.)
You are
told within three days whether the test reaction was positive. A small lump at
the injection site is a positive reaction and usually indicates TB infection.
However, remember that infection with TB does not necessarily mean you have
active, infectious TB. Most people with positive tuberculin tests do not have
active TB.
People
exposed to TB should be skin tested immediately. If you have recently become
infected, your first skin test may show up negative. You may need a second test
10 to 12 weeks after the last time you were with the infectious person: it can
take several weeks after infection for your immune system to react to the test.
If your reaction to the second test is negative, you are probably not infected.
Because
older people may have a poorer immune response, a two-step test method is used:
if the test is negative, it is repeated in seven to ten days.
If you
have a positive reaction, your doctor may perform other tests to check for TB
disease, such as chest x-rays and phlegm tests. As bacteria may be found
elsewhere besides your lungs, blood or urine may also be tested. If your test is
positive, close family members should also be tested.
Skin
testing for TB is done during routine well-baby exams. Infants are usually
screened at one year and children at five.
Reactivity to the test may be poor if you have advanced TB disease, viral
infection (including immunisation with live viral vaccine during the previous 14
days), or bacterial infection. Patients receiving corticosteroids or other
immunosuppressive agents, or who are suffering from malignant conditions, may
also react poorly to the test.
On the
other hand, people who have received the BCG vaccine (see later) may develop a
positive reaction even if they have not been infected with TB bacteria.
Generally speaking, the stronger the skin reaction, the more likely that you
have been infected with TB, or you may even have active TB. However, you can see
that interpreting a positive or a negative skin test can be difficult. The skin
test therefore should ideally not be used as the only means of diagnosis of TB.
Chest X-ray
If you inhaled TB bacteria but fought off the infection, your lungs
may be undamaged and your chest X-ray normal. If bacteria have attacked your
lungs, your chest X-ray will be abnormal. Unfortunately, other conditions (lung
cancer, for example) can also give people symptoms similar to those of TB, and
also result in an abnormal chest X-Ray. Other tests are thus also often required
to make a diagnosis of TB.
Sputum test
A sputum
sample is examined under a microscope for TB bacteria. In some circumstances,
the sputum may also be cultured to see if there are TB bacteria present.
However, it may take up to six to eight weeks for a sputum culture to yield
definite results. In an endemic area, TB can be diagnosed on the basis of a
positive sputum smear alone. In fact, any patient with symptoms suggestive of TB
who has a positive sputum smear should be started on anti-TB therapy, even if a
culture is going to be done.
If a
doctor suspects that the patient has extra-pulmonary TB (such as in the abdomen,
uro-genital system or brain) it is also possible to examine fluids from these
sites under a microscope and to culture them for TB.
In some
situations, the microscopic examination will not show any TB bacteria, and
doctors may sometimes decide to treat for TB based on the patient's history of
exposure to TB, symptoms, X-Ray examination and any other evidence (e.g. skin
test). You can see, though, that the diagnosis of TB is not always easy to make.
Newer tests
A lot of work is being done to find tests that are more reliable or
quicker than the currently available tests. These new tests include:
Tests to detect the DNA of
the Tb bacterium in sputum samples. There are currently tests licensed for use
in the diagnosis of TB. However, they are very expensive, and would not be
praftical for use in a high incidence poipulation such as SA.
Immune
based tests to see if the patient has antibodies, or some other immune reaction
to TB that can be measured. A number of promising antibodies and methods have
been investigated, but nothing is so far well enough established to be used as a
routine diagnostic test.
Treatment
Medicine for Preventive Therapy
Preventive therapy (PT) against TB involves infected people taking
anti-TB drugs to prevent progression to active disease. If you are infected and
in a high-risk group, you must take medicine to avoid developing TB disease. If
you are infected and younger than 35, you may benefit from PT even if you are
not in a high-risk group. Sometimes people receive PT even with a negative skin
test, for example infants, children, and HIV-infected people who have recently
spent time with someone with infectious TB disease, as they are at very high
risk of developing TB disease soon after infection.
The drug
isoniazid, or INH, is usually used for PT. INH kills inactive TB bacteria, and
will keep you from developing TB disease if taken as prescribed. Most people
take INH for at least six to nine months; children and HIV-infected people for
longer.
While
taking INH, see your doctor regularly and do not drink alcohol.
If you
have a positive tuberculin skin test but have not received PT, you should have
routine medical checkups to detect if TB is becoming active, in order to treat
it at an early stage. Know the TB disease symptoms, and see a doctor immediately
should any develop. It is important to make sure that people do not have active
TB before they are given PT. If someone has active TB he or she needs to be
treated differently (see below).
Medicine for TB Disease
People with active TB are usually treated with several anti-TB drugs:
this is more effective in killing all the bacteria and preventing them from
becoming drug resistant. Daily oral doses are continued for six months. Most
commonly used drugs used are:
Isoniazid (INH)
Rifampin
Pyrazinamide
Ethambutol
Streptomycin
A common
treatment regimen involves taking INH, rifampicin, pyrazinamide and ethambutol
for two months, and then INH and rifampicin for the next four months.
The
drugs listed above sometimes cannot kill atypical TB infections, or
drug-resistant strains, and new treatments must be found.
Over 95%
of people properly treated for TB are cured. The main reason treatments fail is
that people do not take their medications properly. Medicines given to people
with TB disease usually stop them from spreading TB bacteria within a few weeks.
Most TB patients live at home and can continue normal activities if they take
their medicine. TB of the lungs or throat means you are probably infectious and
should stay home from work or school. Your doctor will tell you when you can
return to work. When you are no longer infectious or feeling sick, you can
resume normal activities.
Hospitalisation may be advised to prevent spread of bacteria until the
infectious period is over, usually two to four weeks after starting therapy.
Once treatment has started, the amount of coughing is reduced and results in
fewer droplet nuclei. This factor, and that of coughing into a tissue, reduce
the number of droplet nuclei generated during early treatment, thus reducing
infectivity.
It takes
at least six months for the medicine to kill the bacteria. You will probably
start feeling well after only a few weeks of treatment, but it is VERY important
that you take the medicine regularly, and take it for the full six months even
though you have no symptoms. Otherwise, the bacteria will regrow, and may also
become resistant to the drugs. You may need new, different drugs, which must be
taken for longer and usually have more serious side effects. If you become
infectious again, you could give bacteria to others.
Anti-TB
medications are relatively safe, although all have some toxicity. Rifampin and
isoniazid may cause non-infectious hepatitis. Other complications include drug
resistance to certain TB strains and relapse of the disease. Occasionally, the
drugs cause side effects. If you have any of these serious side effects, call
your doctor immediately:
No appetite
Nausea
Vomiting
Yellowish
skin or eyes
Fever
for three or more days
Abdominal pain
Tingling
fingers or toes
Skin rash
Easy bleeding
Aching joints
Dizziness
Tingling
or numbness around the mouth
Easy bruising
Blurred
or changed vision
Ringing in the ears
If you
have any of the following minor side effects, continue taking your medicine:
Rifampin can turn urine,
saliva, or tears orange or brown, and may stain contact lenses.
Rifampin can make you more
sun-sensitive.
Rifampin
makes birth control pills and implants less effective. Use another birth control
method while taking rifampin.
If you are taking rifampin
and methadone (to treat drug addiction), you may have withdrawal symptoms and
your methadone dosage need adjustment.
Symptoms
may improve in two to three weeks.
See your
health professional regularly and have regular blood tests while taking these
drugs. Rest, a healthy environment (clean dry air), stress reduction and a
healthy diet high in vitamin C improve treatment response. Joining a support
group where members share common experiences may alleviate the stress of
illness.
Multidrug-Resistant TB (MDR TB)
Bacterial TB strains resistant to an anti-TB drug or a combination of
these have emerged. Multidrug-resistant TB (MDR TB) is when bacteria become
resistant to more than one drug - resistance to INH and rifampicin is defined as
MDR-TB. When people fail to complete treatment regimens or receive incorrect
treatment, they may remain infectious. Bacteria in their lungs may develop
resistance to certain anti-TB drugs, which then can no longer kill the bacteria.
People they infect will acquire the same drug-resistant strain. When drug
treatment stops, the bacteria build up resistance to medication, reducing
options for further treatment.
The end
result is MDR-TB, a form of TB that doesn't respond to treatment. MDR-TB is
caused by inconsistent or partial treatment, when patients do not take all their
medicines regularly for the required period because they start to feel better,
health workers prescribe the wrong drugs or the wrong combination of drugs, or
the drug supply is unreliable.
Drug
resistance is more common in people who:
Have spent time with someone
with drug-resistant TB disease
Do not take their prescribed
medicine regularly
Do not take all their
medicine
Develop TB disease again,
after having taken TB medicine previously
Come from areas where
drug-resistant TB is common (South East Asia,
Latin America
, Haiti and
the Philippines)
People
with MDR-TB disease must be treated with special drugs, which are not as good as
the usual anti-TB drugs and may cause more side effects. Some people with MDR-TB
disease must consult a TB specialist to observe their treatment to check its
effectiveness. MDR-TB is at least 100 times more expensive to cure than
non-resistant TB. At best, only half those infected with new strains can be
cured. There is no cure affordable to developing countries for some MDR strains.
People
who have spent time with someone with MDR-TB disease can become infected with
MDR-TB bacteria. If they have a positive skin test reaction, preventive therapy
is important for those at high risk of developing MDR-TB disease, such as
children and HIV-infected people.
Up to 50
million people may be infected with drug-resistant TB. MDR-TB comprises about
one to two percent of new cases in South Africa.
The
worst scenario is that TB will become untreatable due to MDR-TB. MDR-TB usually
kills its host, but only after allowing the victim years of life to spread
drug-resistant bacteria to others.
DOTS
DOTS
(Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course) is a strategy used by primary health
services to detect and cure TB patients. DOTS combines five elements: political
commitment, microscopy services, drug supplies, monitoring systems and direct
observation of treatment.
The
biggest obstacle to curing TB was patient non-compliance i.e. failure of
patients to complete treatment - often because of distance from a clinic. With
the DOTS system, patients take medicine under supervision of a community worker,
thus making the health system responsible for achieving a cure. Resources are
first directed toward identifying sputum smear positive cases for treatment, as
these people are the sources of infection. Once infectious cases are detected
using microscopy services, health workers counsel, observe and record patients
taking the correct dosage of anti-TB drugs for six to eight months.
Most
patients start to feel better after a few weeks of medication and are often
tempted to stop taking it. The health system monitors patients' progress,
ensures all TB bacteria are gone, and documents when patients are cured. This is
especially important during the first two months of treatment when patients may
be seriously ill, at risk of acquiring drug resistance, and infectious.
The
correct combination and dosage of anti-TB medicines - short-course chemotherapy
- must be used for the right length of time. These drugs provide a knockout
punch to kill TB bacteria.
After
two months sputum smear testing is repeated, to check progress, and again at the
end of treatment to ensure patients are free of TB.
DOTS
produces cure rates of up to 85 percent even in the poorest countries, and helps
prevent new infections and the development of MDR-TB. The World Bank rates DOTS
as one of the most cost-effective health interventions.
Through
analysis of each group of patients, this system allows health services to
quickly identify districts not achieving 85 percent cure rates, and to provide
additional support and training.
Establishing a dependable, high-quality supply of anti-TB drugs throughout the
health system is essential to ensure uninterrupted treatment.
Prevention
Most
important in TB prevention is for people with infectious TB to take their
medicine as prescribed. If you are taking medication, you need regular check-ups
and possibly additional chest X-rays or phlegm tests to show whether the
medicine is working, and whether you are still infectious. If the tests show
that you still have the bacteria in your sputum even after a few months of
treatment, you may need to take some extra drugs, or change the drugs you are
taking.
Detection of early cases and prompt treatment are crucial in controlling the
spread of TB. The local health department may need to test people who have spent
time with you for TB infection.
If you
are sick enough to go to hospital, you may be put in a special room with air
vents that keep TB bacteria from spreading. People working in these rooms wear
facemasks to protect themselves from bacteria. You must stay in the room to
prevent spreading bacteria.
If you
are infectious while at home, protect yourself and others as follows:
Wash your hands after
sneezing, coughing or holding your hands near your mouth or nose.
Cover
your mouth with a tissue when you cough, sneeze or laugh. Discard used tissues
in a plastic bag, then seal and throw it away.
Do not attend work or school.
Avoid close contact with
others.
Sleep in a room away from
other family members.
Ventilate your room
regularly. TB spreads in small closed spaces. Put a fan in your window to blow
out air that may contain bacteria.
TB Vaccine (BCG)
The TB
vaccine, BCG, is often given to babies and children in countries where TB is
common, although its protective value is debatable. However, it is thought that
BCG does offer increased protection against developing TB in parts of the body
apart from the lungs (i.e. extra-pulmonary TB). The vaccine's efficacy varies
throughout the world from 0 to 80 percent. In South Africa efficacy is about 60
percent against pulmonary TB.
In some
countries, BCG is no longer given routinely, since the incidence of TB in those
countries is very low. In other parts of the world where there is a high
prevalence of TB, BCG is given to children at birth as part of the routine
vaccine schedule. It may also be given at three months, on entering school, and
on leaving high school. BCG must not be given to a person with active TB. If you
were vaccinated with BCG, you may have a positive reaction to a TB skin test,
due to the BCG vaccine itself or to a real TB infection.
A
positive reaction probably means that you have TB infection if:
Your
skin test reaction is large
You
were vaccinated many years before (the BCG reaction lessens over time)
You have ever spent time with
someone with infectious TB
Someone in your family has
had TB
You are from a country where
TB disease is common such as South Africa
BCG
vaccination should not be given to tuberculin-positive individuals, patients on
corticosteroid or immunosuppressive therapy, and other causes of immune
deficiency.
Adverse
effects are rare, however, the vaccine may cause a local reaction in sensitive
people, lasting about three days.
Individuals visiting areas with a high risk of TB infection should be offered
tuberculin skin testing, and BCG vaccination if the test is negative.