Mobilizing Innovative Strategies to Improve TB Diagnosis and Retention in the TB Care Cascade for Migrant Communities in New York City
Columbia University Health Sciences, New York NY
Investigators
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Since 2021, TB incidence in New York City (NYC) has surged partly due to decreased attenÆon during the COVID-19 pandemic and in part due to increased migraÆon across the southern US border. Approximately 205,000 migrants from TB-endemic regions arrived in NYC since April 2022. In 2023, TB incidence in NYC rose by 28%, the highest rates in over a decade, with 89% of cases among individuals born outside the US. Our proposal aims to evaluate innovaÆve methods to improve TB detecÆon, prevenÆon, and treatment among migrants in NYC. IniÆal work by our team in NYC migrant shelters has demonstrated high numbers of persons with of latent TB infecÆon (LTBI) and acÆve TB. Current clinic-based approaches to TB surveillance are ineffecÆve since few high-risk persons complete TB screening and fewer are retained in the TB cascade of care. The proposed intervenÆon, SPOT-TB (Screening with Portable X-rays for rapid recOgniTion of TB), evaluates the use of mobile diagnosÆc teams integraÆng ultraportable digital chest radiography paired with arÆficial intelligence-assisted interpretaÆon, upfront tesÆng for TB (interferon gamma release assay) and HIV, and community engagement to improve iniÆaÆon and retenÆon in the TB cascade of care compared to convenÆonal, clinic- based approaches to TB surveillance. Aim 1 is to idenÆfy acÆve and latent TB in migrant communiÆes using this mobile detecÆon platiorm, hypothesizing that it will increase the proporÆon of migrants compleÆng diagnosÆc evaluaÆon compared to convenÆonal approaches. Aim 2 is to determine the feasibility and acceptability of the SPOT-TB strategy using mixed methods, hypothesizing that it will be highly feasible and acceptable to both care workers and parÆcipants. Aim 3 is to evaluate structural and behavioral barriers to TB care in NYC migrant communiÆes, hypothesizing that unstable housing will be a fundamental barrier and that perceived TB sÆgma will predict subsequent loss to retenÆon in the care cascade. This project employs mixed methods to evaluate the intervenÆonâs feasibility, acceptability, and effecÆveness, uÆlizing advanced staÆsÆcal techniques to understand complex relaÆonships. The scalable SPOT-TB model aims to provide a robust framework for improving TB care in urban settings, with data supporÆng future NIH R01 submissions for larger trials. By enhancing TB detecÆon and care retenÆon, the project seeks to reduce TB transmission and improve health outcomes for NYC's migrant populaÆon.
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