Tuberculosis notifications in Australia, 1998

This article published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Volume 25, No 1, January 2001 contains the 1998 Annual report on the incidence of tuberculosis in Australia.

Page last updated: 14 March 2001

A print friendly PDF version is available from this Communicable Diseases Intelligence issue's table of contents.


Introduction | Methods | Results | Discussion | Acknowledgements | References

National TB Advisory Committee (currently Ral Antic (Chair), John Carnie, Amanda Christensen, Margo Eyeson-Annan, Jag Gill, Anastasios Konstantinos, Vicki Krause, Mark Hurwitz, Avner Misrachi) for the Communicable Diseases Network Australia and New Zealand

Corresponding author: Ms Margo Eyeson-Annan, Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch, NSW Health Department, Locked Bag 961, North Sydney, NSW, Australia 2059. Telephone: +61 2 9424 5759. Fax: +61 2 9424 3755. E-mail: meyes@doh.health.nsw.gov.au

Abstract

Since the inception of the National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS) in 1991, annual crude notification rates for tuberculosis have remained stable at between 5 and 6 per 100,000 population. In 1998, there was a total of 923 TB notifications in Australia of which 884 were new TB cases, and 39 relapsed cases. The corresponding annual crude notification rate for new and relapsed TB was 4.72 and 0.21 per 100,000 respectively. Seventy-seven percent of notifications that had a country of birth reported were overseas born. In keeping with trends observed over recent reporting years, the populations for which notified TB rates are highest include the overseas born from high prevalence countries and Indigenous Australians. The lowest rates of disease have continued to be reported in the non-Indigenous, Australian born population. Surveillance reports over the last seven years indicate that the rate of disease in this population is gradually declining. Commun Dis Intell 2001;25:1-8.

Introduction

The dominant global threat of tuberculosis (TB) to human health has been reaffirmed in a series of recent World Health Organization reports. Annually, over 2 million deaths worldwide were attributable to TB,1 with 95 percent of these occurring in developing countries. It is estimated that there were over 8 million new cases of TB in 1998 worldwide with over 3.6 million reported to the WHO Global surveillance programme by 189 countries.1 Of these TB notifications 39 per cent were reported to be managed under the WHO Directly Observed Treatment-Short course (DOTS) strategy for TB control1 and 1.4 million of these notifications (40%) were new sputum-positive pulmonary cases.

The HIV pandemic continues to fuel the TB epidemic in many regions of the world, especially Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Up to 40 per cent of AIDS deaths in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa are due to TB, and it is estimated that by the end of the century HIV will account for 1.5 million new TB cases per year that would otherwise have not occurred.1

The global burden of TB has been further exacerbated by poverty, natural disasters, conflict and political instability, all of which have served to thwart the development of health services in many countries, or have led to a progressive erosion of existing health infrastructures. Human migration, so often the consequence of these events, has created a social context in which the delivery of effective drug treatment is further compromised. Poorly supervised and inadequately treated TB is the basis for the emergent problem of multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB).

Of global TB case notifications in 1998, 59 per cent were from South-East Asia and the Western Pacific regions.1 In the face of this major regional disease threat, Australia has maintained stable TB rates through effective pre-migration screening and the activities of specialised, multi-disciplinary TB services in the States and Territories.

The National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS), established in 1991, has enabled trends in the rates of active TB to be monitored over the last 7 years, has helped describe the epidemiology of TB in Australia, and has assisted in identifying high-risk groups for targeted control. Future enhancements to the existing system will serve to better inform policy makers, public health practitioners and clinicians on the outcomes achieved from TB control efforts.

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Methods

Notifications reported to State and Territory health authorities are collated on an annual basis and referred to the NMSS in computerised format with all reports being de-identified beforehand. A core data field is shared with the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System (NNDSS). Variables reported in this core field include a unique identifier for each notification, disease code (to differentiate Mycobacterium TB complex from atypical mycobacterial infections), postcode of residence, date of birth, sex, dates of disease onset and report, Indigenous status, and confirmation status of the report. A supplementary data set includes Indigenous status, country of birth, length of residence in Australia for overseas-born persons, species of the pathogen, principal site of disease, methods of diagnosis, antimicrobial therapy initiated at the time of notification, past BCG vaccination, HIV status and classification of TB as new or relapsed disease.

Tuberculosis (new case)

A case which has been confirmed by the identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (or M. africanum or M. bovis) by culture,

or

A case which has been diagnosed to be active clinically and which has been accepted as such by the State or Territory Director of Tuberculosis.

Tuberculosis (relapsed)

A case of active tuberculosis diagnosed again (bacteriologically, radiologically or clinically) having been considered inactive or quiescent following previous full treatment (as deemed appropriate by the State or Territory Director of Tuberculosis).

Mortality data for tuberculosis, and denominator population data for the calculation of rates, were obtained from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).2 Denominator data for age and sex are based on mid-year population estimates for 1998. Resident population by Indigenous status and country of birth were based on estimates of the relevant populations as at 30 June 1998. The classification of countries adhered to the ABS standard classification of countries for social statistics.2

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Results

Notification rates - new and relapsed cases

In 1998, 923 cases of active tuberculosis were notified nationally (4.92 per 100,000); of those 884 (96%) were new cases and 39 were relapsed cases (Table 1). The corresponding crude annual incidence rate was 4.72 per 100,000 for new cases and 0.21 per 100,000 for relapsed cases (Figure 1).

Table 1. Notifications of new and relapsed cases of tuberculosis, and rates per 100,000 population, Australia, 1986 to 1998 by year

Year
New cases Relapsed cases Total cases
Number Rate Number Rate Number Rate
1986
863
5.39
43
0.27
906
5.66
1987
868
5.34
39
0.24
907
5.58
1988
925
5.60
29
0.18
954
5.77
1989
902
5.36
50
0.30
952
5.66
1990
979
5.74
37
0.22
1,016
5.95
1991
903
5.22
47
0.27
950
5.50
1992
983
5.62
28
0.16
1,011
5.78
1993
944
5.35
47
0.27
991
5.61
1994
996
5.58
61
0.34
1,057
5.93
1995
988
5.47
50
0.28
1,038
5.75
1996
983
5.37
54
0.29
1,037
5.66
1997
954
5.15
47
0.25
1,001
5.40
1998
884
4.72
39
0.21
923
4.92


Figure 1. Incidence rates for new TB notifications (1948-1998) and crude TB mortality rates (1967-1998) per 100,000 population, Australia

Figure 1. Incidence rates for new TB notifications (1948-1998) and crude TB mortality rates (1967-1998) per 100,000 population, Australia

Crude incidence rates vary widely between jurisdictions (Table 2) because of high incidence rates in overseas born persons in New South Wales and high incidence rates in Indigenous people in the Northern Territory. Since 1991, rates of TB have been less than 5 per 100,000 in Tasmania, Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia. In the Australian Capital Territory, rates have been less than 5 per 100,000 for all years except 1992 and 1995. The 2 most populous States, Victoria and New South Wales, have reported intermediate rates of between 5 and 8 per 100,000 since 1991, and the Northern Territory has reported rates in excess of 15 per 100,000 over the same time period.

Table 2. Notifications of new and relapsed cases of tuberculosis and rates per 100,000 population, Australia, 1998, by State and Territory

State/Territory
New cases Relapsed cases Total cases
Number Rate Number Rate Number Crude rate
Australian Capital Territory
14
4.54
0
0.00
14
4.54
New South Wales
376
5.93
20
0.32
396
6.24
Northern Territory
30
15.79
1
0.53
31
16.32
Queensland
99
2.86
6
0.17
105
3.04
South Australia
51
3.43
2
0.13
53
3.56
Tasmania
7
1.48
1
0.21
8
1.70
Victoria
234
5.02
6
0.13
240
5.15
Western Australia
73
3.99
3
0.16
76
4.15
Total
884
4.72
39
0.21
923
4.92

Note: Only 5 cases were not residents in the State of notification.


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Age and sex

In 1998, sex was reported in all cases of notified TB. Information on age was available in over 99 per cent of cases with age data missing for only one male and one female (Table 3). Among the new TB cases males accounted for 446 (51%) and females for 438 (49%) of the notifications. The corresponding incidence rates for new disease in males and females was 4.78 and 4.65 per 100,000 population respectively. Ten (10) new cases of tuberculosis were notified in children under 5 years of age with a corresponding rate of 0.78 per 100,000 population.

For relapsed disease, females accounted for 21 (54%) cases and males for 18 (46%). Twenty-nine (74%) of the notifications were in persons aged over 40 years.

Table 3. Notifications of new cases of tuberculosis and rates per 100,000 population, Australia, 1998, by age group and sex

Age group (years)
Males Females Total
Number Rate Number Rate Number Rate
0-4
8
1.21
2
0.32
10
0.78
5-9
10
1.47
8
1.24
18
1.36
10-14
4
0.60
7
1.09
11
0.84
15-19
20
2.96
17
2.65
37
2.81
20-24
34
4.90
42
6.29
76
5.58
25-29
45
6.09
69
9.39
114
7.74
30-34
51
7.24
38
5.37
89
6.30
35-39
35
4.69
39
5.20
74
4.95
40-44
32
4.58
37
5.26
69
4.92
45-49
24
3.66
26
4.00
50
3.83
50-54
27
4.56
17
2.98
44
3.79
55-59
19
4.26
13
3.01
32
3.65
60-64
25
6.78
17
4.59
42
5.69
65-69
28
8.40
25
7.18
53
7.77
70-74
18
6.30
18
5.46
38
6.18
75-79
28
13.93
28
10.45
60
12.80
80-84
17
15.45
17
9.45
34
11.73
85+
14
20.21
17
10.74
31
13.62
Unknown
1
 
1
 
2
 
Total
446
4.78
438
4.65
884
4.72


Principal sites of disease

A principal site of disease was reported for all but 8 cases of new TB and all cases of relapsed TB. Of the new cases, 518 (59%) had pulmonary and 190 (21.5%) had nodal disease (Table 4). Thirty-two percent (203 cases) of the new pulmonary cases were smear-positive.

Rates for pulmonary tuberculosis in Australian born persons was 0.9 per 100,000 population compared to overseas born (8.9 per 100,000 population) and Indigenes (5.6/100,000 population). The rate of extra-pulmonary tuberculosis in Australian born persons was 0.3 per 100,000 population compared with 7.2 per 100,000 population in overseas born persons and 3.3 per 100,000 population in Indigenous Australians.

Table 4. Notifications of new and relapsed cases of tuberculosis in Australia, 1998, by site of disease

Site
New cases Relapsed cases Total cases Total %
Pulmonary
518
29
547
59.3
Pleural
37
0
37
4.0
Lymph nodes
190
7
197
21.3
Bone/Joint
30
0
30
3.3
Genitourinary
41
1
42
4.6
Miliary
4
0
4
0.4
Meningeal
9
0
9
1.0
Peritoneal
16
0
16
1.7
Others
31
2
33
3.6
Unknown
8
0
8
0.8
Total
884
39
923
100


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Bacilles Calmette-Guérin (BCG) status

BCG vaccination status was not provided for 620 (67%) of the 923 TB notifications, 103 (11%) reported a history of BCG vaccination and 200 (22%) had not received a dose of BCG.

Antimicrobial therapy

The choice of antibiotic regimen started at the time of notification was reported in 876 (95%) cases of TB (Table 5). The most commonly prescribed combination was a four-drug combination of isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide and ethambutol in 671 (76.6%) cases (644 new cases and 27 relapsed cases). The next most common was the three-drug combination of isoniazid, rifampicin and pyrazinamide in 62 (7%) cases. Overall, a six-drug regimen was started in one (0.1%) case, a five-drug regimen in 57 (6.5%) cases, a four-drug regimen in 684 (78%) cases, a three-drug regimen in 114 (13. %) cases and a two-drug regimen in 20 (2.3%) cases. The reasons why patients were prescribed a two-drug regime included that they were children (3 cases), suspected of TB or preventative treatment (4 cases), medical complications (2 cases) or to complete treatment commenced overseas (1 case). No further information was available for the remaining 10 two-drug regimen treatments.

Table 5. Initial drug regimen at time of notification of tuberculosis, Australia, 1998

Drug* regimen
New cases Relapsed cases Total
Six-drug regimen
Iso+rif+pyr+etha+str+eth
1
0
1
Five-drug regimen
iso+rif+pyr+etha+other
50
2
52
ISO+rif+pyr+etha+str
2
1
3
ISO+rif+pyr+etha+cyc
1
0
1
ISO+rif+pyr+etha+pro
1
0
1
Four-drug regimen
ISO+rif+pyr+etha
644
27
671
ISO+rif+pyr+other
8
0
8
ISO+pyr+etha+str
1
0
1
ISO+rif+etha+cyc
1
0
1
ISO+rif+pyr+str
1
0
1
ISO+rif+etha+other
1
0
1
rif+pyr+etha+str
1
0
1
Three-drug regimen
ISO+rif+pyr
59
3
62
ISO+rif+etha
26
2
28
ISO+pyr+etha
14
1
15
ISO+etha+other
1
0
1
ISO+etha+str
1
0
1
ISO+rif+str
1
0
1
rif+pyr+etha
3
1
4
rif+etha+str
1
0
1
rif+pro+cyc
0
1
1
Two-drug regimen
ISO+rif
13
0
13
ISO+pyr
2
0
2
ISO+etha
2
0
2
etha+other
1
0
1
rif+etha
1
0
1
rif+pyr
1
0
1
Total
838
38
876

* ISO = isoniazid; rif = rifampicin; pyr = pyrazinamide; etha = ethambutol; str = streptomycin; eth = ethionamide; cyc = cycloserine.


HIV status

HIV status was not provided in 864 (94%) of notified cases of TB. Of the 59 cases in which HIV status was reported, 4 were positive and 55 negative.

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Country of birth

Most (77%) TB notifications were in people born overseas (710). The number of new TB cases reported in the Australian and overseas born populations was 204 (23%) and 680 (77%) respectively. The corresponding rate of new TB disease in the Australian and overseas born populations was 1.5 and 15.5 per 100,000 population respectively (Figure 2).

Figure 2. Incidence rates, new disease, in the Australian and overseas born, 1991-1998

Figure 2. Incidence rates, new disease, in the Australian and overseas born, 1991-1998

The incidence rates of all TB notifications (new and relapsed) per 100,000 overseas born resident populations in Australia are shown in Figure 3. The countries of origin with the highest rates of TB include Vietnam (141 cases; 81.2 per 100,000); Indonesia (42 cases; 73.9 per 100,000); India (61 cases; 64.0 per 100,000); China (52 cases; 34.9 per 100,000); and the Philippines (74 cases; 64.7 per 100,000). Together these countries accounted for 370 (52%) notifications in the overseas born cases. The rates of TB, per 100,000, overseas born resident population in Australia for 1998 are presented together with World Health Organization case incidence rates for TB in the country of origin for the same year (Table 6). In some countries, such as Indonesia, the estimated rates are considered to be higher than those officially reported.

Figure 3. Incidence rates, by country of birth, per 100,000 resident population in Australia, 1998

Figure 3. Incidence rates, by country of birth, per 100,000 resident population in Australia, 1998

Table 6. Total notifications of tuberculosis, Australia, 1998. Number and estimated rates per 100,000 for selected countries of birth *

Country of birth. Selected countries
New cases Relapsed cases Total cases Estimated population by country of birth Rate per 100,000 population in Australia, by country of birth WHO 1998 incidence rate (per 100,000) in country birth
Vietnam
135
6
141
173,549
81.2
112.7
Philippines
68
6
74
114,304
64.7
219.2
India
60
1
61
95,259
64.0
115.0
China
50
2
52
149,101
34.9
36.4
Indonesia
41
1
42
56,798
73.9
19.6
Hong Kong
23
2
25
55,256
45.2
115.2
UK and Ireland
18
2
20
1,168,986
1.7
9.6
Sri Lanka
15
0
15
55,240
27.2
38.1
Italy
13
0
13
247,519
5.3
10.0
Greece
12
0
12
140,955
8.5
10.2
Former Yugoslavia
10
1
11
203,488
5.4
28.5
New Zealand
7
0
7
342,705
2.0
9.7
Turkey
6
0
6
31,428
19.1
34.9
Malaysia
6
0
6
89,527
6.7
65.9
Poland
6
0
6
70,639
8.5
34.4
Fiji
4
0
4
38,889
10.3
20.9
Singapore
4
0
4
28,772
13.9
61.0
Germany
4
0
4
122,690
3.3
12.7
USSR
3
0
3
55,344
5.4
82.4
Total born overseas
680
30
710
4,383,760
16.2
 
Australian born
204
9
213
14,364,044
1.5
 
Total
884
39
923
18,747,804
4.9
4.9
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The length of time that overseas born persons had been resident in Australia was reported for 466 (66%) notifications. Of these 90 (19%) had been resident for less than one year 44 (9%) from one to less than 2 years, 58 (12%) from 2 to less than 5 years, 92 (19%) from 5 to less than 10 years and 182 (39%) for 10 years or more.

The age and sex distributions of Australian born and overseas born TB incidence rates are illustrated in Figure 4. The overseas born population show high age-specific rates in both young adults and the elderly, whereas in the Australian born population, there is a gradual increase in age-specific rates with advancing age.

Figure 4. Age specific TB incidence rates in Australian born and overseas born individuals per 100,000 resident population

Figure 4. Age specific TB incidence rates in Australian born and overseas born individuals per 100,000 resident population

Indigenous status

Indigenous status was reported for 202 (95%) of all notifications for people born in Australia. Indigenous Australians accounted for 39 TB cases in 1998, of which 1   was a relapsed case and 38 were new cases of TB. Twenty-five (64%) notifications of TB in Indigenous Australians were reported from the Northern Territory. The Australian Capital Territory, South Australia, Tasmania, and Victoria reported no Indigenous cases. The annual crude incidence rate of new disease per 100,000 Indigenous population was between 8.8 and 9.4 based on upper and lower Indigenous population estimates for the year. Relapse rates were 0.23 and 0.25 per 100,000 population based on the same estimates. The comparative TB rate of new disease in the Australian born, non-Indigenous population was 1.2 per 100,000 population.

Twenty-two notifications were in males and 16 in females. Six (16%) of the Indigenous notifications were aged over 60 years, and 6 cases were aged less than 14 years.

The age and sex incidence rates for Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian born persons are illustrated in Figure 5. Both show increase in age-specific rates with advancing age, with the Indigenous rates being up to thirty times higher in boys under the age of 5 years and in men aged 45-55 years compared with those of their non-Indigenous counterparts.

Figure 5. Age specific TB incidence rates in Indigenous Australian born and non-Indigenous Australian born

Figure 5. Age specific TB incidence rates in Indigenous Australian born and non-Indigenous Australian born

Mortality

In 1998, the Australian Bureau of Statistics3 reported 62 deaths for which TB was the underlying cause. The crude mortality rate was 0.33 per 100,000, which is the same as the lowest rate for TB in 30 years reported in 1997 (0.33 per 100,000 population). Of these deaths, 41 (66%) were in males and 21 in females. Fifty-four (89%) occurred in persons over the age of 60 years, and 2 TB deaths were registered in persons under 40 years of age (both males; one in the 10 to 14 year age group and one in the 20 to 24 year age group).

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Discussion

Australia continues to report one of the lowest TB rates in the world. Other developed countries that have reported rates of 5 per 100,000 or less in 1998 include Sweden, Malta and Norway.1 From 1986 to 1997 annual crude incidence rates for TB in Australia stabilised at between 5 and 6 per 100,0004-10 and in 1998 dropped below 5 per 100,000 population.

Over half (52%) of all TB notifications in the overseas born in 1998 were from India, Indonesia, China, the Philippines and Vietnam. WHO has indicated that these 5 countries account for more than 52 per cent of all new TB cases notified annually throughout the world.1

While the proportion of overseas born cases represented in annual TB notifications has increased over the last decade, the rates of TB have not. In 1986, 60 per cent of all annual notifications were overseas born, compared to 70 per cent in 1990, 75 per cent in 1996 and 77 per cent in 1998.4-10 For all years, with the exception of 1995, rates in the overseas born have been between 15 and 17 per 100,000. In the Australian born population there has been a decline in the proportion of all TB notifications as well as a progressive decline in incidence rates, from 2.8 per 100,000 in 1986 to a low of 1.5 per 100,000 in 1998.

Over the last 7 years, rates of TB have been 10 to 15 fold higher in Indigenous Australians compared with the non-Indigenous, Australian born population.4-10 Reporting accurately on trends in this group has been made difficult by the shifts in the census denominator estimates for this population, and also because of the inconsistent reporting of Indigenous status by some jurisdictions. Among the risk factors for TB in Indigenous Australians are poor socioeconomic status, diabetes, renal disease, smoking, alcohol abuse, and poor nutrition.11

There are few indications that the global TB threat is abating, which reinforces the need for all nations to remain vigilant. Having a surveillance system in place that can accurately report on trends and important changes in the epidemiology of TB alerts public health authorities and policy makers to emerging problems and facilitates appropriate action.

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Acknowledgements

The members of the Communicable Diseases Network Australia New Zealand, together with the State and Territory Directors of Tuberculosis and other Health Department personnel in the States and Territories who are involved in compiling the individual data sets, are thanked for their cooperation with this surveillance initiative. Special thanks is offered to Louise Carter and Joyce Della in the Australian Capital Territory, Rob Menzies and Mohammed Habib in New South Wales, Lyn Barclay and Mary Verus in the Northern Territory, Patrick Derhy in Queensland, Richard Stapledon and Kylie Van Roekel in South Australia, David Coleman in Tasmania, Martyn Kirk and Trevor Lauer in Victoria, and Sing Pang, Gary Dowse and Jag Atrie in Western Australia. In addition, a note of appreciation is extended to the many physicians and medical practitioners and nurses who contribute to the collection of data relating to TB.

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References

1. World Health Organization. Global Tuberculosis Control: WHO report 2000. Geneva: World Health Organization;2000.

2. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Australian Demographic Statistics, March Quarter 2000.

3. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Causes of Death: ABS;1998.

4. Cheah D. Tuberculosis notification rates, Australia - final data for 1986 to 1990. Commun Dis Intell 1992;16:234-236.

5. Cheah D. Tuberculosis notification rates, Australia, 1991. Communicable Disease Network - Australia. Commun Dis Intell 1992;16:398-400.

6. Hargreaves J. Tuberculosis notifications in Australia, 1992. Communicable Diseases Network of Australia. Commun Dis Intell 1994;18:330-337.

7. Hargreaves J. Tuberculosis notifications in Australia, 1993. Communicable Diseases Network of Australia and New Zealand. Commun Dis Intell 1995;19:334-343.

8. Oliver G, Tuberculosis notifications in Australia, 1994. Communicable Diseases Network Australia New Zealand. Commun Dis Intell 1996;20:108-115.

9. Gilroy N, Oliver G, Harvey B. Tuberculosis notifications in Australia, 1996. Communicable Diseases Network Australia New Zealand. Commun Dis Intell 1998;22:173-182.

10. Gilroy N. Tuberculosis notifications in Australia, 1997. National TB Advisory group. Communicable Disease Network Australia and New Zealand. Commun Dis Intell 1999;23:337-348.

11. Plant AJ, Krause VL, Condon JR, Kerr C. Aborigines and tuberculosis: why they are at risk. Aust J Public Health 1995;19:487-491.


This article was published in Communicable Diseases Intelligence Volume 25, No 1, January 2001.

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