Introduction: One third of the world population is affected by latent tuberculosis, with 9.4 million new cases;
medical students have 2 to 50 times the probability of acquiring the infection. Objectives: Establish the baseline
prevalence of positive tuberculin skin test (TST) at the beginning of medical studies and determine the incidence
and variables associated with TST conversion in medical students. Materials and Methods: Secondary analysis
of a historical cohort (2007-2010) of medical students in a private Peruvian university. The TST conversion was
evaluated. A binomial regression analysis was applied for each associated variable. Results: 707 medical students
were included, of whom 219 (31%) were male. The basal prevalence of reactive TST was 14.4%. Signifi cant
associations were found with the year of university entry of 2007-08 (p = 0.007) and a history of tuberculosis
(p = 0.02). With a total of 822 person-years, the incidence of conversion was 2.92 cases per 100 person-years
(CI95%: 1.96-4.36). The TST conversion was associated with the year of university entry (RR = 2,55; IC95%:
1,06-6,30) and a body mass index ≥ 25 kg/m2 (RR = 0,16; IC95%: 0,01-0,97). No association was detected with
gender, tobacco or alcohol use. Conclusions: There is evidence of a high basal prevalence of latent tuberculosis
infection in medical students. The incidence rate is within expected values and high in comparison with the general
population. People with BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2 have protection against a latent infection. In medical students, more
attention should be paid to biosecurity.; Introducción: Un tercio de la población mundial presenta una infección tuberculosa latente, con 9,4 millones de casos nuevos reportados en el 2009; los estudiantes de medicina tienen de 2 a 50 veces más probabilidad de adquirir la infección.
Authors: Chung Delgado, Kocfa; Guillén Bravo, Sonia; Navarro Huamán, Laura; Quiroz Portella, Rafael; Revilla Montag, Alejandro; Ruíz Alejos, Andrea; Zapata Pachas, Mariana; Bernabe Ortiz, Antonio
Source: Revista Chilena Infectolología
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10757/313713
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