Infant BCG vaccination and risk of pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis throughout the life course: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis

Leonardo Martínez(Boston University), Olivia Cords(University of California, Davis), Qiao Liu(Jiangsu Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Carlos Acuña-Villaorduña(Boston University), Maryline Bonnet(Inserm), Greg J. Fox(The University of Sydney), Anna Cristina Calçada Carvalho(Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Pei‐Chun Chan(National Taiwan University), Júlio Croda(Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul), Philip C. Hill(University of Otago), Elisa López‐Varela(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Simon Donkor(MRC Unit the Gambia), Katherine Fielding(London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine), Hamish Graham(Royal Children's Hospital), Marcos Espinal(World Health Organization Regional Office for the Americas), Beate Kampmann(MRC Unit the Gambia), Arthur Reingold(University of California, Berkeley), Helena Huerga, Julian A. Villalba(Harvard University), Louis Grandjean(University College London), Giovanni Sotgiu(University of Sassari), Uzochukwu Egere(Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine), Sarman Singh(Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Bhopal), Limei Zhu(Jiangsu Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Christian Lienhardt(Inserm), Justin T. Denholm(The University of Melbourne), James A. Seddon(Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation), Christopher C. Whalen(University of Georgia), Alberto L. García‐Basteiro(Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red), Rina Triasih(Universitas Gadjah Mada), Cheng Chen(Jiangsu Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention), Jitendra Singh(All India Institute of Medical Sciences Bhopal), Li‐Min Huang(National Taiwan University Hospital), Surendra K. Sharma(Jamia Hamdard), Djohar Hannoun, Helena del Corral(Universidad de Antioquia), Anna M. Mandalakas(Baylor College of Medicine), LaShaunda L. Malone(University Hospitals of Cleveland), Du-Lin Ling, Afrânio Lineu Kritski(Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro), Catherine M. Stein(University Hospitals of Cleveland), Richa Vashishtha(All India Institute of Medical Sciences), F Boulahbal(Institut Pasteur d'Algérie), Chi‐Tai Fang(National Taiwan University), W. Henry Boom(University Hospitals of Cleveland), Eduardo Martins Netto(Universidade Federal da Bahia), Antônio Carlos Moreira Lemos(Universidade Federal da Bahia), Anneke C. Hesseling(Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation), Alexander Kay(Baylor College of Medicine), Edward C. Jones‐López(University of Southern California), C. Robert Horsburgh(Boston University), Christoph Lange(Baylor College of Medicine), Jason R. Andrews(Stanford University)
The Lancet Global Health
August 9, 2022
Cited by 197Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: BCG vaccines are given to more than 100 million children every year, but there is considerable debate regarding the effectiveness of BCG vaccination in preventing tuberculosis and death, particularly among older children and adults. We therefore aimed to investigate the age-specific impact of infant BCG vaccination on tuberculosis (pulmonary and extrapulmonary) development and mortality. METHODS: In this systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis, we searched MEDLINE, Web of Science, BIOSIS, and Embase without language restrictions for case-contact cohort studies of tuberculosis contacts published between Jan 1, 1998, and April 7, 2018. Search terms included "mycobacterium tuberculosis", "TB", "tuberculosis", and "contact". We excluded cohort studies that did not provide information on BCG vaccination or were done in countries that did not recommend BCG vaccination at birth. Individual-level participant data for a prespecified list of variables, including the characteristics of the exposed participant (contact), the index case, and the environment, were requested from authors of all eligible studies. Our primary outcome was a composite of prevalent (diagnosed at or within 90 days of baseline) and incident (diagnosed more than 90 days after baseline) tuberculosis in contacts exposed to tuberculosis. Secondary outcomes were pulmonary tuberculosis, extrapulmonary tuberculosis, and mortality. We derived adjusted odds ratios (aORs) using mixed-effects, binary, multivariable logistic regression analyses with study-level random effects, adjusting for the variable of interest, baseline age, sex, previous tuberculosis, and whether data were collected prospectively or retrospectively. We stratified our results by contact age and Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection status. This study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42020180512. FINDINGS: We identified 14 927 original records from our database searches. We included participant-level data from 26 cohort studies done in 17 countries in our meta-analysis. Among 68 552 participants, 1782 (2·6%) developed tuberculosis (1309 [2·6%] of 49 686 BCG-vaccinated participants vs 473 [2·5%] of 18 866 unvaccinated participants). The overall effectiveness of BCG vaccination against all tuberculosis was 18% (aOR 0·82, 95% CI 0·74-0·91). When stratified by age, BCG vaccination only significantly protected against all tuberculosis in children younger than 5 years (aOR 0·63, 95% CI 0·49-0·81). Among contacts with a positive tuberculin skin test or IFNγ release assay, BCG vaccination significantly protected against tuberculosis among all participants (aOR 0·81, 95% CI 0·69-0·96), participants younger than 5 years (0·68, 0·47-0·97), and participants aged 5-9 years (0·62, 0·38-0·99). There was no protective effect among those with negative tests, unless they were younger than 5 years (0·54, 0·32-0·90). 14 cohorts reported on whether tuberculosis was pulmonary or extrapulmonary (n=57 421). BCG vaccination significantly protected against pulmonary tuberculosis among all participants (916 [2·2%] in 41 119 vaccinated participants vs 334 [2·1%] in 16 161 unvaccinated participants; aOR 0·81, 0·70-0·94) but not against extrapulmonary tuberculosis (106 [0·3%] in 40 318 vaccinated participants vs 38 [0·2%] in 15 865 unvaccinated participants; 0·96, 0·65-1·41). In the four studies with mortality data, BCG vaccination was significantly protective against death (0·25, 0·13-0·49). INTERPRETATION: Our results suggest that BCG vaccination at birth is effective at preventing tuberculosis in young children but is ineffective in adolescents and adults. Immunoprotection therefore needs to be boosted in older populations. FUNDING: National Institutes of Health.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis