Last data update: Sep 16, 2024. (Total: 47680 publications since 2009)
Records 1-5 (of 5 Records) |
Query Trace: Warkentin J [original query] |
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TB-free Ebeye: Results from integrated TB and noncommunicable disease case finding in Ebeye, Marshall Islands
Brostrom RJ , Largen A , Nasa JN , Jeadrik G , Yamada S , Yadav S , Ko E , Warkentin JV , Chorba TL . J Clin Tuberc Other Mycobact Dis 2024 35 100418 BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) incidence rates in the Republic of the Marshall Islands are among the highest in the world, 480/100,000 in 2017. In response, the Health Ministry completed islandwide screening in Ebeye Island in 2017. METHODS: Participants were interviewed to obtain TB history, exposures, and symptoms. TB assessment included chest radiography with sputum collection for GeneXpert® MTB-RIF if indicated. TB diagnosis was made by consensus of visiting TB experts. Participants were also screened for Hansen's disease (HD) and diabetes mellitus (DM). For persons aged ≥21 years, blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood glucose were assessed. RESULTS: A total of 5,166 persons (90.0 % of target population) completed screening leading to the identification of 39 new cases of TB (755/100,000) and 14 persons with HD (270/100,000). DM was detected in 1,096 persons (27 %), including in 351 persons not previously diagnosed. The rate of hypertension was 61 % and of hypercholesterolemia was 15 %. New or prevalent TB diagnosis was associated with newly diagnosed or history of DM (aOR 4.68, 2.15-10.20). CONCLUSIONS: In Ebeye, an integrated TB screening campaign found TB, HD, DM, and hypertension. TB and DM were strongly associated. |
Bedaquiline for the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in the United States
Mase S , Chorba T , Parks S , Belanger A , Dworkin F , Seaworth B , Warkentin J , Barry P , Shah N . Clin Infect Dis 2019 71 (4) 1010-1016 BACKGROUND: In 2012, the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of bedaquiline fumarate as part of combination therapy for treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB). We describe the treatment outcomes, safety, and tolerability of bedaquiline in our case series. METHODS: Data on patients started on bedaquiline for MDR TB between September 2012 and August 2016 were collected retrospectively through four TB programs using a standardized abstraction tool. Data were analyzed using univariate methods. Adverse events were graded using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events. RESULTS: Of 14 patients in this case series, 7/14 (50%) had MDR, 4/14 (29%) had pre-extensively-drug-resistant (XDR), and 3/14 (21%) had XDR. All had pulmonary TB, 5/14 (36%) had pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB, and 9/13 (69%) were smear-positive. One patient (7%) had HIV co-infection, 5/14 (36%) had diabetes mellitus, and 5 (36%) had been previously treated for TB. All patients were non-U.S.-born and 5 (36%) had private insurance. All patients achieved sputum culture conversion within a mean of 71 days (26-116); 6/14 after starting bedaquiline. Twelve (86%) completed treatment and 1/14 (7%) moved out of the country. One patient (7%) had QTc prolongation >500 milliseconds and died 20 months after discontinuing bedaquiline of a cause not attributable to the drug. The most common adverse events were peripheral neuropathy (50%), not customarily associated with bedaquiline use, and QTc prolongation (43%). CONCLUSIONS: Of 14 patients, one had an adverse event necessitating bedaquiline discontinuation. Safety, culture conversion, and treatment completion in this series support use of bedaquiline for the treatment of MDR/XDR TB. |
Tuberculosis mortality in the United States: Epidemiology and prevention opportunities
Beavers SF , Pascopella L , Davidow AL , Mangan JM , Hirsch-Moverman YR , Golub JE , Blumberg HM , Webb RM , Royce RA , Buskin SE , Leonard MK , Weinfurter PC , Belknap RW , Hughes SE , Warkentin JV , Welbel SF , Miller TL , Kundipati SR , Lauzardo M , Barry PM , Katz DJ , Garrett DO , Graviss EA , Flood JM . Ann Am Thorac Soc 2018 15 (6) 683-692 RATIONALE: More information on risk factors for death from tuberculosis in the United States could help reduce the tuberculosis mortality rate, which has remained steady for over a decade. Objective(s) To identify risk factors for tuberculosis-related death in adults. METHODS: We performed a retrospective study of 1,304 adults with tuberculosis who died before treatment completion and 1,039 frequency-matched controls who completed tuberculosis treatment in 2005-2006 in thirteen states reporting 65% of U.S. tuberculosis cases. We used in-depth record abstractions and a standard algorithm to classify deaths in persons with tuberculosis as tuberculosis-related or not. We then compared these classifications to causes of death as coded in death certificates. We used multivariable logistic regression to calculate adjusted odds ratios (aOR) for predictors of tuberculosis-related death among adults compared with those who completed tuberculosis treatment. RESULTS: Of 1,304 adult deaths, 942 (72%) were tuberculosis-related, 272 (21%) were not, and 90 (7%) couldn't be classified. Of 847 tuberculosis-related deaths with death certificates available, 378 (45%) did not list tuberculosis as a cause of death. Adjusting for known risks, we identified new risks for tuberculosis-related death during treatment: absence of pyrazinamide in the initial regimen (aOR=3.4, 95% CI=1.9-6.0); immunosuppressive medications (aOR=2.5, 95% CI=1.1-5.6); incomplete TB diagnostic evaluation (aOR=2.2, 95% CI=1.5-3.3), and an alternative non-TB diagnosis prior to TB diagnosis (aOR=1.6, 95% CI=1.2-2.2). Conclusions Most persons who died with tuberculosis had a tuberculosis-related death. Intensive record review revealed tuberculosis as a cause of death more often than did death certificate diagnoses. New tools, such as a TB mortality risk score based on our study findings, may identify TB patients for in-hospital interventions to prevent death. |
Elephant-to-human transmission of tuberculosis, 2009
Murphree R , Warkentin JV , Dunn JR , Schaffner W , Jones TF . Emerg Infect Dis 2011 17 (3) 366-71 In 2009, the Tennessee Department of Health received reports of 5 tuberculin skin test (TST) conversions among employees of an elephant refuge and isolation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from a resident elephant. To determine the extent of the outbreak and identify risk factors for TST conversion, we conducted a cohort study and onsite assessment. Risk for conversion was increased for elephant caregivers and administrative employees working in the barn housing the M. tuberculosis-infected elephant or in offices connected to the barn (risk ratio 20.3, 95% confidence interval 2.8-146.7). Indirect exposure to aerosolized M. tuberculosis and delayed or inadequate infection control practices likely contributed to transmission. The following factors are needed to reduce risk for M. tuberculosis transmission in the captive elephant industry: increased knowledge about M. tuberculosis infection in elephants, improved infection control practices, and specific occupational health programs. |
Public health response to a multidrug-resistant tuberculosis outbreak among Guatemalans in Tennessee
Miramontes R , Lambert L , Haddad MB , Boaz V , Hawkins S , Zylstra M , Allen R , Rivers S , Ali B , Chewning SS , Holt E , Warkentin J . South Med J 2010 103 (9) 882-6 BACKGROUND: In June 2007, the Tennessee Department of Health notified the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of four multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB) cases in individuals of Guatemalan descent, and requested onsite epidemiologic assistance to investigate this outbreak. METHODS: A case was defined as either culture-confirmed MDR TB with a drug-susceptibility pattern closely resembling that of the index case, or a clinical diagnosis of active TB disease and corroborated contact with a person with culture-confirmedMDRTB. Medical records were reviewed, and patients and their contacts were interviewed. RESULTS: Five secondary TB cases were associated with the index case. Of 369 contacts of the index case, 189 (51%) were evaluated. Of those, 97 (51%) had positive tuberculin skin test (TST) results, 79 (81%) began therapy for latent TB infection (LTBI), and 38 (48%) completed LTBI therapy. CONCLUSION: Despite consistent follow up by public health officials, a low proportion of patients diagnosed with LTBI completed therapy. Clinicians and public health practitioners who serve immigrant communities should be vigilant for MDR TB. |
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