A study aimed to evaluate both asymptomatic and symptomatic tuberculosis (TB) among young children with household exposure to drug-susceptible TB, using standardized investigations regardless of symptom status. It was a prospective observational cohort study conducted in Worcester, South Africa, between September 2019 and March 2024. Children aged 2 to 60 months with documented household exposure to an adult with TB within the previous 12 months were enrolled. Children with HIV infection or other medical conditions that could alter TB risk were excluded. Participants without prevalent TB at baseline were followed for up to 36 months.
All enrolled children underwent comprehensive baseline TB evaluation irrespective of symptoms. Investigations included symptom screening, interferon-γ release assay (QuantiFERON-TB Gold Plus), induced sputum testing with liquid mycobacterial culture (MGIT) and Xpert MTB/RIF Ultra, chest radiography (CXR), and multiplex respiratory pathogen PCR testing. TB was classified using a modified childhood TB consensus case definition that allowed inclusion of asymptomatic children. Confirmed TB required microbiological confirmation by culture or Xpert Ultra (excluding trace-positive results). Unconfirmed TB required at least two features among TB-compatible symptoms, TB-compatible CXR findings, household TB exposure, or trace-positive Xpert Ultra results. Prevalent TB was defined as meeting TB criteria within 60 days of enrollment.
Among 506 screened child household contacts, 430 (85.0%) were enrolled. Prevalent TB was identified in 154/430 children (35.8%), including 21/430 (4.9%) with Confirmed TB and 133/430 (30.9%) with Unconfirmed TB. Notably, 17/21 (81.0%) children with Confirmed TB were asymptomatic. Overall, 55/154 (35.7%) children with prevalent TB were asymptomatic and 99/154 (64.3%) were symptomatic. Compared with symptomatic TB cases, asymptomatic TB cases were more likely to have microbiologically confirmed disease (30.9% vs 4.0%, P < .001) and a TB-compatible CXR (54.4% vs 15.2%, P < .001).
TB treatment was initiated in 78/154 (50.6%) children meeting the TB case definition, including all Confirmed TB cases. Treatment was started more frequently in asymptomatic than symptomatic TB cases (80.0% vs 34.3%, P = .01). Among treated children, positive IGRA was associated with asymptomatic TB compared with children without TB (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 3.23, 95% CI 1.66–6.30), as was male sex (aOR 1.98, 95% CI 1.01–3.87). Compared with symptomatic TB, microbiological confirmation was associated with asymptomatic TB (aOR 3.73, 95% CI 1.08–12.88).
The findings suggest that a substantial proportion of TB among young household-exposed children is asymptomatic, including most microbiologically confirmed cases. Reliance on symptom-based screening alone would likely miss many children with TB. Key limitations include incomplete CXR availability during the COVID-19 pandemic, potential diagnostic uncertainty among Unconfirmed TB cases, and conduct at a single South African site, which may limit generalizability.
Source: Mulenga H, Shenje J, Mendelsohn SC, Luabeya AK, Tameris M, Tredoux EN, Nemes E, Bilek N, Beyers E, Ivacik-Goncalves D, Andrews JR. Asymptomatic tuberculosis in children with household exposure to Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 2026 May 15;82(5):e1005-13.