(Jan 13, 2026)
Advancing Tuberculosis Detection Beyond Symptom- and Single-Test–Based Approaches
- Demonstrated that subclinical pulmonary TB constitutes a substantial proportion of culture-confirmed cases, with many patients lacking cough yet exhibiting radiographic abnormalities and high smear positivity, indicating overlooked transmission potential.
- Provided evidence that symptom-based screening alone is insufficient, particularly in older adults and immunocompromised populations, supporting the need for imaging- and molecular-enhanced screening strategies.
- Quantified limitations of existing diagnostic prediction models (moderate AUCs), highlighting gaps in current case-finding algorithms.
- Showed that CD8⁺ T-cell responses (QFT-Plus TB2–TB1) improve sensitivity for detecting active TB and recent infection, offering incremental diagnostic value beyond standard IGRA positivity.
- Identified biological markers that can help differentiate recent infection and active disease from remote latent TB, informing risk-stratified clinical decision-making.
Optimizing Contact Investigation, Testing Windows, and Post-Exposure Follow-Up
- Established that over one-quarter of IGRA conversions occur after 10 weeks post-exposure, demonstrating that early repeat testing risks missing clinically relevant TB infection and early disease.
- Provided population-level evidence to support extending repeat QFT testing to ≥10 weeks in national TB contact investigation programs.
- Identified a measurable burden of active TB developing among IGRA-negative contacts, indicating residual risk despite negative screening results.
- Defined high-risk subgroups among IGRA-negative contacts (older age, diabetes, renal failure, smear-positive exposure, household or congregate settings) who warrant enhanced surveillance and prolonged follow-up (up to 24 months).
- Integrated immunological, clinical, and exposure data to inform risk-adapted contact management strategies rather than uniform testing protocols.
See also: Yoseph Samodra
Informing Population-Level and Preventive TB Control Strategies
- Demonstrated strong dose–response and synergistic effects of multiple unhealthy lifestyle factors (smoking, underweight, inactivity, alcohol use, poor diet) on active TB risk in older adults.
- Showed that individuals with multiple lifestyle risk factors had markedly elevated TB risk (up to ninefold), particularly among those with diabetes, underscoring effect modification.
- Highlighted the importance of multisectoral, lifestyle-based TB prevention strategies alongside biomedical interventions in moderate-incidence settings.
- Provided evidence to support targeted TB preventive treatment (TPT) by combining exposure history, immunological markers, comorbidities, and lifestyle risk profiles.
- Contributed to policy-relevant evidence aligned with long-term TB elimination goals, emphasizing early detection, differentiated follow-up, and upstream risk reduction.
See also: Lin TB Lab
References:
- Chew, Y.R., Tay, J.Y., Kyaw, W.M., Chia, P.Y. and Ng, D.H.L., 2025. Subclinical disease among people with culture-confirmed pulmonary tuberculosis in Singapore-a retrospective study. International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 153, p.107768.
- Kyaw, W.M., Tay, J.Y., Lim, L.K.Y. and Ng, D.H.L., 2025. Time interval for QuantiFERON-TB Gold Plus conversion after last exposure with tuberculosis. ERJ Open Research, 11(3).
- Tavitian-Exley, I., Kyaw, W.M., Kang-Yang, L.L., Foo, K., Boudville, I.C., Cutter, J.L. and Ng, D.H.L., 2024. Risk factors for tuberculosis among close IGRA-negative contacts of persons with infectious tuberculosis in Singapore. International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 147, p.107166.
- Li, H., Chee, C.B., Geng, T., Pan, A. and Koh, W.P., 2022. Joint associations of multiple lifestyle factors with risk of active tuberculosis in the population: the Singapore Chinese Health Study. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 75(2), pp.213-220.
- Chee, C.B.E., Kyi-Win, K., Tan, S. and Wang, Y.T., 2025. QuantiFERON-TB Gold Plus CD8+ T cell responses in contacts with tuberculosis disease and recent tuberculosis infection. Microbiology Spectrum, 13(12), pp.e01353-25.