Chapter 1: Epidemiology of tuberculosis in Canada

A. Mounchili, Reshel Perera, Robyn S. Lee, H. Njoo, James Brooks
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

• The overall incidence rate of active tuberculosis (TB) disease in Canada is low and has remained unchanged in the last 10 years at around 4.6-5.1 individuals per 100,000 population, with males more affected than females. The rate in 2020 was 4.7 per 100,000 population. • Pronounced disparities in certain population subgroups and geographic regions persist. Foreign-born individuals and Canadian-born Indigenous peoples in particular continue to be disproportionately affected by TB. • The active TB disease incidence rate in Inuit communities has been the highest in Canada for the past two decades, peaking in 2012 at 251.6 individuals per 100,000 population, more than 51 times the overall Canadian incidence rate. In 2020, the incidence rate was 70.3 per 100,000 population, or 15 times the overall Canadian rate. • The rate of active TB disease among First Nations on-reserve populations has gradually decreased since 2009, and leveled off after 2017 at just under 20.0 per 100,000 population, or three times the Canadian incidence rate. Incidence rates among First Nations off-reserve populations have been lower, at about 10.0 per 100,000 population since 2013. • Métis have been less affected among Canadian-born Indigenous peoples, with active TB disease incidence rates that gradually decreased to levels below the overall Canadian rate since 2012, varying between 2.2 and 3.7 per 100,000 population. • Individuals born outside Canada constitute the largest proportion of people reported with active TB disease, with an incidence rate that has remained almost unchanged since 2005, at about 15.0 individuals per 100,000 population. • The Canadian-born, non-Indigenous population is the least affected, with an incidence rate that gradually decreased by 83.3%, from 1.2 per 100,000 population in 2001 to 0.2 per 100,000 population in 2020. • Between 2017 and 2020, 3.5% of individuals who had active TB disease and whose human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) status was known were HIV-positive. • In the last 20 years, on average, 12 TB-related deaths per year were reported in Canadian-born, non-Indigenous populations, compared to about 44 deaths annually for foreign-born populations. • Over the last 12 years, drug-resistant TB was isolated in 9.5% (n = 1,598) of people diagnosed with active TB disease and whose isolates were subjected to susceptibility testing. Of these, 83.2% (n = 1,329) had mono-resistance, primarily to isoniazid (INH) (n = 1,072) and pyrazinamide (PZA) (n = 225). Multidrug resistance (ie, resistance to INH and rifampin) accounted for 3.6% (n = 57), and extensively drug-resistance (ie, resistance to isoniazid and rifampin), plus any fluoroquinolone and at least 1 of 3 injectable second-line drugs (ie, amikacin, kanamycin or capreomycin), was rare and detected only 6 times.
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第一章:加拿大结核病的流行病学
•加拿大活动性结核病的总发病率很低,在过去10年中保持不变,约为每10万人4.6-5.1人,男性比女性受影响更大。到2020年,这一比例为每10万人中4.7人。•某些人口亚群和地理区域的明显差异仍然存在。外国出生的个人,特别是加拿大出生的土著人民,仍然不成比例地受到结核病的影响。•在过去二十年中,因纽特人社区的活动性结核病发病率是加拿大最高的,2012年达到峰值,每10万人中有251.6人,是加拿大总发病率的51倍多。到2020年,发病率为每10万人中有70.3人,是加拿大总体发病率的15倍。•自2009年以来,第一民族保留地人口中活动性结核病的发病率逐渐下降,并在2017年之后趋于稳定,每10万人中有20.0人以下,是加拿大发病率的三倍。自2013年以来,第一民族保留地外人口的发病率较低,约为每10万人10.0人。•在加拿大出生的土著人民中,msamims受到的影响较小,自2012年以来,活动性结核病发病率逐渐降至低于加拿大总体发病率的水平,在每10万人2.2至3.7人之间。•在加拿大境外出生的人在报告的活动性结核病患者中所占比例最大,其发病率自2005年以来几乎保持不变,约为每10万人15.0人。•加拿大出生的非土著人口受影响最小,发病率逐渐下降83.3%,从2001年的每10万人1.2人下降到2020年的每10万人0.2人。•在2017年至2020年期间,3.5%患有活动性结核病且已知其人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)状况的个体为艾滋病毒阳性。•在过去20年中,在加拿大出生的非土著人口中,每年平均报告12例与结核病有关的死亡,而在外国出生的人口中,每年约有44例死亡。•在过去12年中,在9.5% (n = 1,598)被诊断患有活动性结核病的人中分离出耐药结核病,并对其分离物进行了敏感性试验。其中,83.2% (n = 1,329)为单耐药,主要是异烟肼(INH) (n = 1,072)和吡嗪酰胺(PZA) (n = 225)。多药耐药(即对INH和利福平耐药)占3.6% (n = 57),广泛耐药(即对异烟肼和利福平耐药),加氟喹诺酮类药物和至少3种注射二线药物中的1种(即阿米卡星、卡那霉素或卷曲霉素)的情况很少,仅检出6次。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
51
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