4.7 Article

The Seasonality of Tuberculosis, Sunlight, Vitamin D, and Household Crowding

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 210, Issue 5, Pages 774-783

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiu121

Keywords

crowding; household; seasonality; sunlight; tuberculosis; vitamin D

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust
  2. charity Innovation For Health and Development (IFHAD)
  3. Imperial College Biomedical Research Centre
  4. British Infection Association
  5. Global Health Trials consortium (Medical Research Council)
  6. Global Health Trials consortium (Department for International Development)
  7. Global Health Trials consortium (Wellcome Trust)
  8. World Health Organization
  9. Sir Halley Stewart Trust
  10. Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics
  11. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  12. Medical Research Council [MR/K012126/1, MR/K007467/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  13. MRC [MR/K007467/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Background. Unlike other respiratory infections, tuberculosis diagnoses increase in summer. We performed an ecological analysis of this paradoxical seasonality in a Peruvian shantytown over 4 years. Methods. Tuberculosis symptom-onset and diagnosis dates were recorded for 852 patients. Their tuberculosis-exposed cohabitants were tested for tuberculosis infection with the tuberculin skin test (n = 1389) and QuantiFERON assay (n = 576) and vitamin D concentrations (n = 195) quantified from randomly selected cohabitants. Crowding was calculated for all tuberculosis-affected households and daily sunlight records obtained. Results. Fifty-seven percent of vitamin D measurements revealed deficiency (<50 nmol/L). Risk of deficiency was increased 2.0-fold by female sex (P < .001) and 1.4-fold by winter (P < .05). During the weeks following peak crowding and trough sunlight, there was a midwinter peak in vitamin D deficiency (P < .02). Peak vitamin D deficiency was followed 6 weeks later by a late-winter peak in tuberculin skin test positivity and 12 weeks after that by an early-summer peak in QuantiFERON positivity (both P < .04). Twelve weeks after peak QuantiFERON positivity, there was a midsummer peak in tuberculosis symptom onset (P < .05) followed after 3 weeks by a late-summer peak in tuberculosis diagnoses (P < .001). Conclusions. The intervals from midwinter peak crowding and trough sunlight to sequential peaks in vitamin D deficiency, tuberculosis infection, symptom onset, and diagnosis may explain the enigmatic late-summer peak in tuberculosis.

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