About a million children, double the
previous estimate, fall ill with tuberculosis every year, said a study Monday
that also gave the first tally of drug-resistant TB among the young.
"Many cases of tuberculosis and
multi-drug resistant tuberculosis disease are not being detected in
children," it said.
The team's computer model, based on
population data and previous studies, suggests 999,800 people aged under 15
fell sick with TB in 2010.
Around 40 percent of the cases were in
Southeast Asia and 28 percent in Africa.
"Our estimate of the total number
of new cases of childhood TB is twice that estimated by the WHO (World Health
Organisation) in 2011, and three times the number of child TB cases notified
globally each year," said Ted Cohen from the Harvard School of Public
Health.
The research, published in The Lancet,
coincides with World TB Day, which places the spotlight on a disease that
claims some 1.3 million lives each year.
The team estimated that nearly 32,000
children in 2010 had multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB), meaning the strain was
impervious to frontline drugs isoniazid and rifampin and was thus harder and
costlier to treat.
This is the first estimate of MDR-TB
among children under 15, who constitute a quarter of the global population.
Children are at a higher risk of
disease and death from MDR-TB, but react well to medication. They are harder to
diagnose, partly because smaller children cannot cough up sputum samples needed
for laboratory tests.
Reliable estimates are necessary for
health authorities to assign resources for diagnosing and treating the infectious
lung disease.
Commenting on the study, Ben Marais of
the Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity in Sydney,
Australia, described it as the "most rigorous effort to date" to
assess TB and MDR-TB incidence in children.
"Every effort should be made to
reduce the massive case-detection gap and address the vast unmet need for
diagnosis and treatment," he said.
The WHO says about 450,000 people
developed MDR-TB in 2012 and 170,000 died from it.
Less than 20 percent of MDR patients received
appropriate treatment, which promotes further spread of the disease.
Nearly 10 percent of MDR cases are
thought to be of the even deadlier XDR (extensively drug resistant) variety
which does not respond to a yet wider range of drugs.
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