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. 2015 Oct 15;1(2):e15. doi: 10.2196/publichealth.4991

The US National Tuberculosis Surveillance System: A Descriptive Assessment of the Completeness and Consistency of Data Reported from 2008 to 2012

Rachel S Yelk Woodruff 1,✉,#, Robert H Pratt 1,#, Lori R Armstrong 1,#
Editor: Travis Sanchez
Reviewed by: Nancy Baruch, Norshahrizan Nordin
PMCID: PMC4869229  PMID: 27227133

Abstract

Background

In 2009, the Tuberculosis (TB) Information Management System transitioned into the National TB Surveillance System to allow use of 4 different types of electronic reporting schemes: state-built, commercial, and 2 schemes developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Simultaneously, the reporting form was revised to include additional data fields.

Objective

Describe data completeness for the years 2008-2012 and determine the impact of surveillance changes.

Methods

Data were categorized into subgroups and assessed for completeness (eg, the percentage of patients dead at diagnosis who had a date of death reported) and consistency (eg, the percentage of patients alive at diagnosis who erroneously had a date of death reported). Reporting jurisdictions were grouped to examine differences by reporting scheme.

Results

Each year less than 1% of reported cases had missing information for country of origin, race, or ethnicity. Patients reported as dead at diagnosis had death date (a new data field) missing for 3.6% in 2009 and 4.4% in 2012. From 2010 to 2012, 313 cases (1%) reported as alive at diagnosis had a death date and all of these were reported through state-built or commercial systems. The completeness of reporting for guardian country of birth for pediatric patients (a new data field) ranged from 84% in 2009 to 88.2% in 2011.

Conclusions

Despite major changes, completeness has remained high for most data elements in TB surveillance. However, some data fields introduced in 2009 remain incomplete; continued training is needed to improve national TB surveillance data.

Keywords: public health surveillance, disease notification, information systems, data cleaning, quality assurance

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) incidence (or case notification) is used globally for monitoring trends, planning, and evaluating public health programs [1,2]. In the United States, national incidence reporting began in 1953, with documented cases and operational data from each reporting jurisdiction submitted in aggregate [3]. By 1985, all jurisdictions were reporting individual cases using a standardized form, the Report of Verified Case of Tuberculosis (RVCT) [4]. In 1993, the RVCT was expanded to include additional risk factors and laboratory information, and TB surveillance data began to be entered and transmitted to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) through a single software system [5].

The US National Tuberculosis Surveillance System (NTSS) underwent major revisions in 2009 [6]. RVCT was expanded to include 11 new data fields, and 25 of 38 existing fields were modified. Concurrently, state and local reporting areas transitioned from reporting TB case data through the Tuberculosis Information Management System (TIMS), a stand-alone, modem-based system developed at the CDC, to their choice of 4 reporting schemes: (1) the National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (NEDSS)-base system, a CDC-developed infrastructure; (2) the electronic RVCT (eRVCT), also developed by the CDC; (3) state-developed custom software systems; or (4) commercial software developed by private companies. All reporting schemes were required to conform to specific Public Health Information Network and NEDSS data standards [7,8].

The transition from a single reporting scheme to a choice of different types of schemes allowed state and local TB programs more control over the structure of their surveillance systems and gave them responsibility for their own data validation [9]. Prior to 2009, surveillance data came to the CDC via TIMS, which had a built-in data validation system for alerting logic errors to help ensure accurate data entry and reporting. These validation standards were retired with TIMS in 2010, although the CDC-developed eRVCT and NEDSS-base system retained validation rules similar to those in TIMS. Validation rules for state-developed and commercial schemes vary by jurisdiction. Furthermore, routine maintenance, updates, changes, and enhancements of state-developed and commercial reporting schemes are now at the expense of state and local TB programs; information technology (IT) expertise is necessary at the state and local level to maintain and update these types of systems [9]. Modifications of state and commercial reporting schemes, such as changes in RVCT data fields, have to be done at the level of the individual reporting jurisdiction; therefore, modifications to NTSS are more complicated than they were prior to 2009, when the CDC was able to update a single system and provide all reporting jurisdictions with updated software that incorporated the revisions.

The objectives of this report are to describe the completeness and consistency of TB case data reported to the CDC from 2008 to 2012, to determine the extent to which the 2009 changes in RVCT and reporting schemes affected the data, and to find ways to improve data quality. Although the surveillance report and the reporting schemes described here are specific to TB, the analytical methods and results may be useful to managers of other public health programs who are contemplating similar changes in surveillance systems or reporting schemes.

Methods

Data sources

NTSS receives TB surveillance data electronically from the 50 states and the District of Columbia [6]. The reporting officials in TB programs collect laboratory and clinical TB data from a variety of sources and store them in electronic reporting systems. From 1998 to 2009, those officials submitted TB surveillance data through TIMS by using file-transfer protocol and controlled-access Internet and modem transfer [10]. Starting in 2009, TB surveillance data have been transmitted using Public Health Information Network Messaging Service software in HL7 messaging format.

The CDC provides preliminary TB surveillance datasets weekly for reporting program officials to verify reported data. The CDC creates final TB surveillance datasets annually for reporting, research, and publications. Since 2009, TB data reported to the CDC have been subjected to a data-cleaning routine before a finalized dataset is created. The data cleaning routine is applied to selected data fields using a hierarchical strategy as determined by CDC staff (eg, a dependent field, such as the year of previous TB episode, is deleted if the independent field, such as history of previous TB, is not present) that creates a dataset that has fewer inconsistencies but not necessarily more accuracy. Our analysis included only clean, finalized annual datasets.

Analysis

We examined responses from NTSS data elements from 2008 to 2012 (the most recent year of data at the time of analysis) and new elements from 2009 to 2012. Although NTSS includes data from 1993 to 2012, the purpose of this study was to examine how the changes in data elements and reporting schemes affected the data; therefore, the study period begins the year before the changes occurred. New data elements from Alaska, California, Connecticut, Illinois, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, North Dakota, New York City, and Ohio were not included for 2009 because these jurisdictions used TIMS that year and the new elements were not supported. In addition, we excluded California and Vermont from analyses that included HIV test results for 2008-2012 because HIV reporting practices were different for these jurisdictions.

Reporting jurisdictions were categorized according to the type of reporting scheme (TIMS, commercial, eRVCT, NEDSS-base, or state-developed) used in 2009 and 2010-2012. Because of the changes in both reporting schemes and RVCT in 2009, data from that year were examined separately from latter years’ data.

Data were categorized into subgroups and data elements associated with subgroups were assessed for completeness (eg, the percentage of patients dead at diagnosis who had a date of death reported) and consistency (eg, the percentage of patients alive at diagnosis who erroneously had a date of death reported). The results are presented for a subset of data elements that are clinically or demographically important or exhibited inconsistency or incompleteness in reporting. Furthermore, for each TB case we selected key data elements from 3 different categories: risk factors, clinical aspects of TB disease, and molecular aspects of TB disease.

Results

From 2008 to 2012, 56,040 cases were reported to NTSS [6]. Each year, fewer than 1% of reported cases had missing or unknown information for origin of birth (nativity; 59/56,040), or race/ethnicity (197/56,040). One data element that demonstrated inconsistency in completeness was correctional facility status (residence in correctional facility at time of diagnosis), for which 6.5% of cases (746/11,520) had unknown or missing information in 2009, compared with approximately 1% or less of cases (265/44,529) in other years (Table 1). When correctional facility status was examined by reporting system (Table 2), information was missing for 17.1% (729/4266) of the cases reported by jurisdictions using TIMS in 2009, while the other reporting systems had less than 1% of cases (17/6871) missing for this element. Among cases reported as residents in correctional facilities at the time of diagnosis, information on the type of correctional facility was missing for 9% (10/110) of cases reported through state-developed reporting systems in 2009 and 2010-2012 (25/267), compared to less than 3% (17/1386) through TIMS, commercial, NEDSS-based, and eRVCT reporting systems for those same years (Tables 2 and 3).

Table 1.

Completeness of trend data elements reported to the National Tuberculosis Surveillance System, United States, 2008-2012.



2008 2009 2010 2011 2012


N % N % N % N % N %
Total reported TB cases
12,904 100.0 11,520 100.0 11,163 100.0 10,517 100.0 9945 100.0
Resident in correctional facility











Yes 499 3.9 465 4.0 489 4.4 423 4.0 386 3.9

No 12,386 96.0 10,309 89.5 10,536 94.4 10,036 95.4 9509 95.6

Unknown/
Missing
19 0.1 746 6.5 138 1.2 58 0.6 50 0.5
Type of correctional facility indicateda
492 98.6 451 97.0 471 96.3 411 97.2 382 99.0
History of TB
572 4.4 492 4.3 510 4.6 511 4.9 481 4.8
Year of TB reportedb
564 98.6 455 92.5 493 96.7 497 97.3 462 96.0
Year of TB missingb
8 1.4 37 7.5 17 3.3 14 2.7 19 4.0
Initial DST donec
9604 98.4 8725 98.2 8316 98.4 7966 98.5 7315 96.3
Isoniazid resultsc
9385 97.7 8684 99.5 8279 99.6 7923 99.5 7258 99.2
Rifampin resultsc
9377 97.6 8678 99.5 8279 99.6 7919 99.4 7260 99.3

aAmong patients who were residents of correctional facilities at the time of diagnosis.

bAmong cases that reported history of previous TB.

cDrug susceptibility test. Among patients who had positive culture; includes resistant and susceptible test results.

Table 2.

Completeness and consistency of data elements reported to the National Tuberculosis Surveillance System by type of reporting system, United States, 2009.

 
TIMSb Commercial State developed NEDSS-basec eRVCTd
 
N % N % N % N % N %
Total reported TB cases
4266 100.0 470 100.0 2815 100.0 2852 100.0 1117 100.0
Resident in correctional facility










No 3438 80.6 463 98.5 2689 95.5 2654 93.1 1065 95.3

Unknown/
Missing
729 17.1 0 0.0 16 0.6 1 0.0 0 0.0

Yes 99 2.3 7 1.5 110 3.9 197 6.9 52 4.7
Type of correctional facility indicateda
92 92.9 7 100.0 100 90.9 197 100.0 51 98.1
History of TB
222 100.0 20 100.0 130 100.0 89 100.0 31 100.0
Year of TB reported
195 87.8 18 90.0 124 95.4 88 98.9 30 96.8
Year of TB missing
27 12.2 2 10.0 6 4.6 1 1.1 1 3.2
Alive at time of TB diagnosis
4182 100.0 466 100.0 2747 100.0 2787 100.0 1094 100.0
Date of death indicated
N/A N/A 8 1.7 40 1.5 0 0.0 0 0.0
Patient < 15 years of age
N/A N/A 32 100.0 153 100.0 214 100.0 44 100.0
Guardian country of birth
N/A N/A 28 87.5 119 77.8 189 88.3 36 81.8
Patient 15 years of age or older
N/A N/A 438 100.0 2662 100.0 2638 100.0 1073 100.0
Guardian country of birth
N/A N/A 1 0.2 63 2.4 8 0.3 2 0.2

aAmong patients who were residents at correctional facilities at the time of diagnosis.

bTuberculosis Information Management System.

cNational Electronic Disease Surveillance System.

dElectronic Report of Verified Case of Tuberculosis.

Table 3.

Completeness and consistency of data elements reported to the National Tuberculosis Surveillance System by type of reporting system, United States, 2010-2012.


Commercial State developed NEDSS-basea eRVCTb

N % N % N % N %
Total reported TB cases 12,685 100.0 8551 100.0 7646 100.0 2743 100.0
Resident in correctional institute 312 100.0 267 100.0 489 100.0 230 100.0
Type of correctional facility indicated 303 97.1 242 90.6 489 100.0 230 100.0
History of TB 689 100.0 421 100.0 286 100.0 106 100.0
Year of TB 665 96.5 408 96.9 276 96.5 103 97.2
Alive at time of TB diagnosis 12,397 100.0 8330 100.0 7468 100.0 2680 100.0
Date of death indicated 162 1.3 151 1.8 0 0.0 0 0.0
Patient < 15 years of age 597 100.0 484 100.0 504 100.0 119 100.0
Guardian country of birth 525 87.9 374 77.3 485 96.2 105 88.2
Patient 15 years of age or older 12,088 100.0 8067 100.0 7142 100.0 2624 100.0
Guardian country of birth 38 0.3 317 3.9 19 0.3 3 0.1

aNational Electronic Disease Surveillance System.

bElectronic Report of Verified Case of Tuberculosis.

In 2009, 7.5% of cases (37/492) with a previous history of TB reported were missing the year previous TB disease occurred, compared to 1.4% (8/572) in 2008 (Table 1). No previous year of TB disease was reported for cases that did not have a history of previous TB disease indicated. Among cases reported in 2009 with a previous history of TB disease indicated, the highest percentage of missing years of previous TB disease was with TIMS at 12.2% (27/222; Table 2), compared to 10% or less (10/270) of cases with a previous history of TB that were missing years of previous TB disease reported through the other systems (Table 2). For 2010-2012, the year of previous TB disease was missing for 3-4% of cases (50/1502) for which previous TB disease history was indicated across all reporting system types (Table 3).

Of the 426 culture-positive cases reported in 2008 that did not have initial drug susceptibility testing (4.2% of all culture-positive cases, 426/10,024, including those with unknown or missing initial drug susceptibility test results), 1 case was reported as susceptible to isoniazid and 1 case was reported as susceptible to rifampin. From 2009 to 2012, no culture-positive cases without initial drug susceptibility test reported “done” had isoniazid or rifampin results reported. For sputum culture and sputum smear results reported as negative or positive, over 99% of cases (31,098/31,410) each year had a sputum smear or sputum culture collection date reported (Table 4). No sputum culture or sputum smear collection dates were reported for cases that did not have an associated sputum culture or sputum smear test done.

Table 4.

Completeness of new data elements reported to the National Tuberculosis Surveillance System, United States, 2009-2012.


2009 2010 2011 2012

N % N % N % N %
Dead at time of TB diagnosis 160 100.0 252 100.0 245 100.0 221 100.0
Date of death indicated 153 95.6 244 96.8 235 95.9 213 96.4
Sputum culture positive or negative 5743 100.0 9018 100.0 8599 100.0 8050 100.0
Sputum collection date indicated 5704 99.3 8952 99.3 8502 98.9 7940 98.6
Sputum smear positive or negative 5788 100.0 9162 100.0 8709 100.0 8217 100.0
Sputum smear date indicated 5743 99.2 9139 99.7 8674 99.6 8141 99.1
Patient < 15 years of age 443 100.0 637 100.0 578 100.0 489 100.0
Guardian country of birth 372 84.0 555 87.1 510 88.2 424 86.7
Lived outside US > 2 months 120 27.1 161 25.3 124 21.5 139 28.4
Country where lived indicateda 116 96.7 151 93.8 119 96.0 135 97.1

a Among pediatric patients who lived outside the country for 2 months.

For cases reported as dead at TB diagnosis, 4.4% (7/160) were missing date of death in 2009, the first year date of death information was collected, and 4.6% (8/221) were missing it in 2012 (Table 4). In 2009, 48 of 7094 TB cases (0.70%) were reported as alive at diagnosis and had a date of death indicated (Table 5). A majority of these (83%, 40/48; Table 2) were reported through state-developed systems. From 2010 to 2012, 313 of 30,875 TB cases (1%) were reported as alive at diagnosis and had a date of death indicated (Table 5); all were reported through state-developed or commercial reporting systems (Table 3).

Table 5.

Consistency between new data elements reported to the National Tuberculosis Surveillance System, United States, 2009–2012.


2009 2010 2011 2012

N % N % N % N %
Alive at time of TB diagnosis 7094 100.0 10,903 100.0 10,261 100.0 9711 100.0
Date of death indicated 48 0.7 111 1.0 116 1.1 86 0.9
Sputum culture not done/unknown/missing 1511 100.0 2100 100.0 1851 100.0 1748 100.0
Sputum collection date indicated 5 0.3 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0
Sputum smear not done/unknown/missing 1466 100.0 1998 100.0 1799 100.0 1703 100.0
Sputum smear date indicated 1 0.1 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0
Patient 15 years of age or older 6811 100.0 10,526 100.0 9939 100.0 9456 100.0
Guardian country of birth 74 1.1 102 1.0 152 1.5 123 1.3
Lived outside US > 2 months 101 1.5 178 1.7 183 1.8 157 1.7
Country where lived indicateda 92 91.1 168 94.4 179 97.8 155 98.7

aAmong pediatric patients who lived outside the country for more than 2 months.

Country of birth of primary guardian, whether the patient lived outside the United States for more than 2 months and if so in what countries, are new data elements requested for pediatric patients (<15 years of age). Completeness ranged from 84% (372/443) in 2009 to 88.2% (510/578) in 2011 for the guardian country of birth for pediatric TB cases and from 93.8% (151/161) in 2010 to 97.1% (135/139) in 2012 for the country where the pediatric patient lived for more than 2 months (Table 4). Among nonpediatric cases (15 years of age and older), 1-2% (451/36,732) each year indicated a country of birth for the primary guardian. In 2009 and 2010-2012, completeness in reporting for guardian country of birth for pediatric TB patients was highest for those reported through NEDSS-base software systems (88.3%, 189/214, and 96.2%, 485/504, respectively; Tables 2 and 3). Nonpediatric cases with primary guardian information were predominantly reported through state-developed software systems in 2009 (Table 2) and 2010-2012 (Table 3).

Discussion

Principal Findings

Considering the extent of changes the US TB Surveillance System underwent in 2009, TB surveillance data have maintained a high level of completeness, with most data elements showing the same levels of completeness after 2009. New data elements, for which collection and reporting began in 2009 for most reporting jurisdictions, have varied completeness but show an overall improvement from 2009 to 2012. Some new data elements are taking longer to reach a high percentage of completeness at the state and local levels, or are less complete or less concordant in 2012 than they were in 2009. For example, patients who were dead at the time of TB diagnosis should have had a corresponding date of death recorded (the date-of-death data element was introduced in 2009). However, some jurisdictions reported a date of death for patients who were alive at diagnosis, which occurred more frequently in 2012 than in 2009 (Table 5). If a patient is alive at TB diagnosis and dies during therapy, there is no corresponding date of death field; therefore, some reporting jurisdictions may be recording the date of patient death in the field for death date of patients who were dead at the time of TB diagnosis. Among cases reported in 2009 that were alive at diagnosis and had a date of death recorded, 58% (28/48) had a date of death that matched the date therapy was stopped (data not shown), indicating that the date of death field was used to record the date of death during therapy. Completeness may also have been affected by lack of information or inability to find information in patient records, misinterpretation of data element definitions, or use of a paper reporting form that does not match the electronic reporting data entry form [2]. For some jurisdictions, electronic reporting systems may not have been revised to accommodate reporting of certain data elements; therefore, those elements cannot be reported electronically. Ongoing training of local staff to account for turnover and changes in duties may improve completeness of reporting [2].

The data cleaning routine does not take into consideration all possible data errors. Information requested specifically for all TB patients less than 15 years of age was sometimes reported for cases 15 years of age or older (Tables 2, 3, and 5), and the date of death may have been indicated for patients who were alive at diagnosis (Tables 2, 3, and 5); these discrepancies are not corrected as part of data cleaning. Therefore, care is warranted when working with NTSS data for reporting or research purposes. Proper subsetting is needed to prevent inclusion of patients who should not be included in a specific subset for analysis, such as patients alive at diagnosis when analyzing date of death, as these exclusions are not built into the dataset and omitting them could result in erroneous results.

Differences in completeness of data reported through the different electronic systems may be due to system configuration or reporting practices within the jurisdictions. The high percentage of missing correctional facility information reported in 2009 (Table 1) was due to data transmission problems experienced by a single reporting jurisdiction. The information for residence in a correctional facility existed in TIMS but was not transferred from TIMS to the jurisdiction’s new reporting system. Furthermore, commercial and state-developed reporting systems are responsible for their own validation, which could account for some higher percentages of missing or inaccurate data. TB case surveillance data do not allow for assessment of systems or reporting practices at the state and local level, so it was not possible to distinguish between factors related to systems or reporting practices in this analysis.

In 2009 there was an unexpected and significant decline in the numbers of TB cases reported to NTSS compared to previous years [11]. Changes to electronic reporting systems were not deemed to be a causal factor. Rather, we concluded that the decline in TB cases was a result of decreased TB diagnoses in the United States. Therefore, we did not consider the unexpected decline in TB cases in 2009 to be a factor in our study.

Limitations

This study has several limitations. Limited resources prevented us from conducting a validation study at the local level to compare patient data from medical charts to the data reported to NTSS. This would have been especially valuable to assess data elements that exhibited inconsistency. The data-cleaning routine replaced some validation rules that existed in TIMS but may not have improved the quality of data reported to the CDC. For example, from 2009 to 2012, 2 cases reported as not having initial susceptibility testing done were also reported as susceptible to both isoniazid and rifampin (data not shown), indicating that initial drug susceptibility testing may actually have been done. Because the cases were reported as not undergoing susceptibility testing, the susceptibility results were deleted for these cases during data cleaning and therefore are not reflected in the clean, finalized dataset. Isoniazid and rifampin are important drugs for treating TB and resistance to both defines multidrug-resistant TB. If susceptibility testing was indeed done for isoniazid and rifampin, then drug susceptibility testing should be reported as “done” on RVCT.

Conclusion

Several ongoing efforts have been implemented to improve the quality of surveillance reporting. The CDC initiated a series of trainings in 2010 with the goal of familiarizing state and local reporting jurisdictions with the updated RVCT and reporting requirements [12]. Additionally, in 2011, the CDC conducted a series of trainings on quality assurance of TB data [13]. The trainings culminated in a published manual that is available to reporting jurisdictions and others interested in attaining high-quality surveillance data [14]. A collection of reports showing various aspects of TB data reported to the CDC is available through NTSS to authorized state and local TB program staff. Information provided through NTSS reports includes the numbers of missing and unknown values associated with reported data elements, the frequency of reporting for select elements, when data were last transmitted to the CDC, and a list of elements with no information ever reported for a particular reporting area. State and local TB program staff can use these reports to identify and correct gaps in reported data or to report data errors to the CDC. The National Tuberculosis Indicators Project (NTIP) can also be used to verify and check TB surveillance data reported to the CDC [13]. Reporting jurisdictions can compare their records with NTIP data and use the NTIP to identify discrepancies. The RVCT has an accompanying manual that provides comprehensive reporting guidance for each data element [15]. Furthermore, the RVCT workgroup, composed of CDC and state and local TB program staff, actively pursues clarification and provides guidance on improving RVCT reporting. As state and local TB control programs are often challenged with declining resources and staff turnover, the CDC should periodically provide updated quality assurance and RVCT training webinars and materials to ensure that TB control program staff remain aware of data problem areas and new and existing quality assurance tools and techniques. These efforts, as well as ongoing discussions regarding data quality assurance, will improve the completeness and accuracy of TB surveillance data.

State and local communicable disease surveillance systems vary from disease-specific systems to systems used for reporting an array of diseases and conditions [9]. However, from 2007 to 2010, interoperability and integration of state and local public health disease surveillance systems increased substantially [9]. As public health programs begin to utilize current advances in electronic reporting and embrace new national guidelines related to health information exchange and meaningful use, more electronic surveillance systems will be modified to increase capacity and meet national standards [9,16]. The results of the NTSS transition from a single, stand-alone surveillance system to a variety of different reporting schemes illustrate that major modifications of disease surveillance systems can be done without substantial impact on the completeness of surveillance data.

Abbreviations

CDC

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

eRVCT

electronic Report of Verified Case of Tuberculosis

NEDSS

National Electronic Diseases Surveillance System

NTIP

National Tuberculosis Indicators Project

NTSS

National Tuberculosis Surveillance System

RVCT

Report of Verified Case of Tuberculosis

TB

tuberculosis

TIMS

Tuberculosis Information Management System

Footnotes

Conflicts of Interest: None declared.

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