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Journal Article > Research

Body mass index trajectories and association with tuberculosis risk in a cohort of household contacts in Southern Africa

Larsson L, Calderwood CJ, Marambire ET, Held K, Banze D, Mfinanga A, Madziva K, Walsh P, Jacob J, Fernandez FT, Lungu P, Mesic A, Khosa C, Minja LT, Mutsvangwa J, Bhargava M, Lauseker M, Gupta RK, Heinrich N, Kranzer K
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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Studies have demonstrated an inverse log-linear relationship between body mass index (BMI) and tuberculosis incidence. However, a person’s BMI is dynamic and longitudinal changes may be more informative than cross-sectional assessments. We evaluate the association between cross-sectional and changing BMI and risk of tuberculosis and describe longitudinal trajectories in a high-risk cohort.


METHODS

ERASE-TB was a prospective longitudinal cohort study of household contacts ≥10 years in Southern Africa (Zimbabwe, Tanzania, and Mozambique), with 6-monthly follow-up up to 24 months. Associations between BMI and tuberculosis were investigated based on baseline (including haemoglobin) and changing BMI, using logistic, Poisson, and Cox models. Prevalent tuberculosis was defined as diagnosis during <30 days after recruitment. Growth mixture modelling (GMM) was used to model longitudinal latent trajectories.


RESULTS

Of 2,107 recruited household contacts (621 [29.5%] adolescents and 1,310 [62.2%] female), 520 (24.7%) were underweight. There were 21 and 41 people diagnosed with prevalent and incident tuberculosis, of whom 5/21 (23.8%) and 12/41 (29.3%) were underweight. Being underweight and anaemic (aHR: 3.77, 95% CI: 1.50-9.51) and >10% negative change in BMI during follow-up (aIRR: 2.27 (95% CI: 0.22-22.9) were associated with increased risk of incident tuberculosis. The association between continuous BMI-for-age Z-scores were non-linear, with increased risk of tuberculosis with lower BMI. Four latent groups were defined in the GMM: increasing, decreasing, and low/high stable BMI.


CONCLUSIONS

Declining BMI, regardless of absolute value, is a strong predictor of tuberculosis among household contacts. Longitudinal measurements should be considered in active case finding among tuberculosis-affected households.

Countries
MozambiqueTanzaniaZimbabwe
Subject Area
tuberculosismalnutrition
DOI
doi: 10.1093/cid/ciaf222
Published Date
28-Apr-2025
PubMed ID
40293814
Languages
English
Journal
Clinical Infectious Diseases
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