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Post-tuberculosis airway disease: A population-based cohort study of people immigrating to British Columbia, Canada, 1985–2015

Current epidemiological evidence of post-TB airway disease is largely cross-sectional and derived from high-TB-incidence settings. We present the first cohort study of post-TB airway disease in a low-TB-incidence setting. (1) analyze the risk of airway disease by respiratory TB, (2) assess potential...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:EClinicalMedicine 2021-03, Vol.33, p.100752-100752, Article 100752
Main Authors: Basham, C. Andrew, Karim, Mohammad E., Cook, Victoria J., Patrick, David M., Johnston, James C.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Current epidemiological evidence of post-TB airway disease is largely cross-sectional and derived from high-TB-incidence settings. We present the first cohort study of post-TB airway disease in a low-TB-incidence setting. (1) analyze the risk of airway disease by respiratory TB, (2) assess potential unmeasured confounding between TB and airway disease, and (3) investigate TB effect measure modification. A population-based cohort study using healthcare claims data for immigrants to British Columbia (BC), Canada, 1985–2015. Airway disease included chronic airway obstruction, asthma, bronchitis, bronchiolitis, and emphysema. Respiratory TB was defined from TB registry data. Cox proportional hazards (PH) regressions were used to analyze time-to-airway disease by respiratory TB. Sensitivity analyses included varying definitions of TB and airway disease. Potential unmeasured confounding by smoking was evaluated by E-value and hybrid least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO)-high-dimensional propensity score (hdPS). In our cohort (N = 1 005 328; nTB=1141) there were 116 840 incident cases of airway disease during our 30-year study period (10.43 per 1,000 person-years of follow-up), with cumulative incidence of 42·5% among respiratory TB patients compared with 11·6% among non-TB controls. The covariate-adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) for airway disease by respiratory TB was 2·08 (95% CI: 1·91–2·28) with E-value=3·58. The LASSO-hdPS analysis produced aHR=2·26 (95% CI: 2·07–2·47). A twofold higher risk of airway disease was observed among immigrants diagnosed with respiratory TB, compared with non-TB controls, in a low-TB-incidence setting. Unmeasured confounding is unlikely to explain this relationship. Models of post-TB care are needed. Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
ISSN:2589-5370
2589-5370
DOI:10.1016/j.eclinm.2021.100752