Who
The study modeled the adult population aged >15 years in 12 high TB burden countries: Bangladesh, Brazil, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Philippines, Russia, Thailand, and Viet Nam. These countries represented 64.2% of global incident TB cases among WHO’s 2015 high-burden list. Countries with HIV prevalence >1% and North Korea were excluded because of high uncertainty in TB and BMI estimates.
What
The study examined how population nutrition changes, especially BMI distribution and elimination of undernutrition (“zero hunger”), could affect TB incidence and mortality and progress toward the WHO End TB Strategy targets by 2030.
Key findings:
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Under the current-level scenario, TB burden declined only slowly:
- TB incidence fell from 196.9 to 172.1 per 100,000 between 2015 and 2030, a 12.9% reduction (CrI: 2.76%–23.6%).
- TB mortality fell from 46.5 to 40.3 per 100,000, a 14.0% reduction (CrI: 3.7%–23.2%).
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Under the continuing trend scenario (more overweight/obesity, less underweight), compared with current level:
- Incidence declined by an additional 14.7% (CrI: 12.7%–16.7%).
- Mortality declined by an additional 15.6% (CrI: 12.5%–19.2%).
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Under the current level + zero hunger scenario, compared with current level:
- Incidence declined by an additional 32.0% (CrI: 20.0%–43.8%).
- Mortality declined by an additional 37.3% (CrI: 26.1%–49.6%).
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Under the optimal scenario (continuing trend + zero hunger):
- Incidence declined by an additional 38.2% (CrI: 27.0%–49.1%).
- Mortality declined by an additional 42.4% (CrI: 32.1%–53.5%).
- This corresponded to 20.6 million TB cases prevented and 5.4 million TB deaths averted across the 12 countries from 2015 to 2030.
Countries with the largest projected gains in the optimal scenario included Cambodia, Viet Nam, and Bangladesh. Smaller gains were seen in Brazil and Russia.
Authors’ interpretation: Reducing undernutrition and increasing BMI at population level could substantially reduce TB burden and meaningfully support progress toward the End TB Strategy, though not fully achieve the 80% incidence reduction target.
Policy implication: TB control should be linked with nutrition policy, hunger reduction, and coordination with non-communicable disease sectors.
When
The model projected outcomes from 2015 to 2030, with 2015 as the baseline year, aligned with the start of the WHO End TB Strategy. Historical calibration used WHO TB incidence estimates from 2006 to 2015. BMI trend estimates covered 1980–2015.
Where
The analysis focused on 12 high TB burden countries across Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe. TB incidence data came from WHO country-specific estimates, and BMI estimates came from a systematic review and pooled analysis of 1,698 population-based measurement studies.
Why
The study aimed to address a gap in understanding how nutrition transition and nutritional interventions may influence TB epidemiology and whether these shifts could help countries move closer to the WHO End TB Strategy target of an 80% reduction in TB incidence by 2030. The rationale was that low BMI increases TB risk, while higher BMI may be protective despite diabetes-related risks.
How
This was a model-based epidemiological analysis using dynamic compartmental TB transmission models stratified by BMI category:
- underweight: BMI <18.5
- normal weight: 18.5 to <25
- overweight: 25 to <30
- obese: ≥30
For each BMI category, the model included six TB states:
susceptible, fast infection, slow infection, pulmonary active disease, recovered, and fast infection after reinfection.
Model features:
- Included TB natural history, case detection rate, and treatment success rate at country level.
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Incorporated BMI effects on:
- progression from infection to active TB,
- TB case fatality,
- general mortality.
- Included both direct BMI effects and indirect effects mediated through diabetes.
- BMI estimates were stratified by age and sex.
- Models were calibrated to WHO data using Approximate Bayesian Computation rejection algorithm and a Euclidean distance fit metric.
Sensitivity analysis showed results were especially sensitive to:
- the relative risk of TB incidence in underweight vs normal weight, and
- the transmission parameter.
Limitations
From the provided text:
- The analysis ignored the impact of COVID-19 on TB and BMI.
- Evidence on BMI and risk of TB infection was described as limited.
- Some countries were excluded due to high HIV prevalence or uncertain estimates, which may affect generalizability.
Strength of evidence
This is a modeling study, not a randomized or observational trial. It provides scenario-based projections rather than direct causal empirical evidence, so conclusions depend on the validity of model structure and input assumptions.
Source: Wu CY, Ku CC, McQuaid CF, Lönnroth K, Cegielski JP, Bentham J, Ezzati M, Lin HH. Estimating the impact of nutritional transition and ending hunger on tuberculosis in 12 high-burden countries: a model-based scenario analysis. BMJ Global Health. 2025 Dec 25;10(12):e018839. https://benangmerah.net/record/58/estimating-the-impact