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McGill TB Research Group Madhukar Pai, MD, PhD Associate Professor [email protected]

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McGill TB Research Group. Madhukar Pai, MD, PhD Associate Professor [email protected]. What is TB?. Tuberculosis is an infectious disease Patient is sick, contagious We call this ‘TB’ Mycobacterium tuberculosis is name for the bacteria that causes TB - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: McGill TB Research Group

McGill TB Research Group

Madhukar Pai, MD, PhDAssociate [email protected]

Page 2: McGill TB Research Group

What is TB?

• Tuberculosis is an infectious disease– Patient is sick, contagious– We call this ‘TB’

• Mycobacterium tuberculosis is name for the bacteria that causes TB

• Most infected people do not develop the disease– These people are not contagious– We call this ‘latent infection’

Page 3: McGill TB Research Group

Clinical manifestations of TB

• General– Fever, weight loss, weakness– “Consumption”, “Phthisis”

• Organ specific– Lungs: cough, spitting up blood– Others:

• Scrofula: swollen lymph nodes• Spine: ‘hump-back’ • Etc.

Page 4: McGill TB Research Group

Chest x-ray in pulmonary TB

Cavity represents collection of millions of bacteria that are transmitted by cough

TB is reason why X-rays are done with immigration

Page 5: McGill TB Research Group

TB disease and infection: Natural History

Infection

Infection without disease – 90%

Person with active TB

Page 6: McGill TB Research Group

TB disease and infection: Natural History

Infection

Progression to active TB disease - 10%

Infection without disease – 90%

Person with active TB

Preventive treatment: Isoniazid

Page 7: McGill TB Research Group

Global epidemiology

• Tuberculosis disease– ~9 million new cases per year– 1.5 million deaths per year• Every 15 seconds

• Latent infection– 2 billion persons infected• One person infected each second

– If 10% progress, 200 million future cases

Page 8: McGill TB Research Group

0 - 2425 - 4950 - 99100 - 299

No estimate300 or more

Estimated new TB cases (all forms) per 100 000 population

TB incidence per 100,000 people

Source: WHO

Page 9: McGill TB Research Group

0 - 9991000 - 999910 000 – 99 999100 000 - 999 999

No estimate1 000 000 or more

Estimated number of new cases (all forms)

TB cases

Source: WHO

Page 10: McGill TB Research Group

TB in Canada has declined to low levels, but it remains an important concern in immigrants and

Aboriginals

April 2011

Page 11: McGill TB Research Group
Page 12: McGill TB Research Group

Globally, incidence rates falling after peak in 2004, but only at <1%/year

Peak in 2004

Incidence (all forms, incl. PLHIV)

TB Notifications

Incidence TB in PLHIV

shaded area = uncertainty band

Notification gap

Courtesy: WHO Stop TB Department

Page 13: McGill TB Research Group

http://www.worldcarecouncil.org

TB elimination is impossible with current tools

Page 14: McGill TB Research Group

14

Diagnostic tools that Robert Koch used…

Microscopy Culture Tuberculin test

Page 15: McGill TB Research Group

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are still in use today!

• Active TB– Sputum microscopy [1882]– Mycobacterial culture [1882]– Chest X-rays [1896]

• Latent TB (LTBI)– Tuberculin skin test [1890]

Page 16: McGill TB Research Group

We desperately need new TB vaccines and drugs

BCG: 1920s

Rifampin: 1950s

Page 17: McGill TB Research Group
Page 18: McGill TB Research Group

Host genetics and strain variations

Page 19: McGill TB Research Group

New TB diagnostics

Page 20: McGill TB Research Group

New TB drug regimens

Page 21: McGill TB Research Group

Global health and TB

Page 22: McGill TB Research Group

Modeling and cost-effectiveness

Page 23: McGill TB Research Group

Social determinants

Page 24: McGill TB Research Group

Statistical methods and approaches

Page 25: McGill TB Research Group

Knowledge translation and policy

Page 26: McGill TB Research Group
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Sources of funding

Page 29: McGill TB Research Group

Thank you!