Table 1.
Risk Factors for Acquisition of TB Infection | ||
Close Contacts | Country of Origin | High-Risk Residential Setting |
Children who are close contacts of a recently diagnosed person with contagious TB are at especially high risk for TB infection | Children born in or traveled to (travel >1 week) any country outside of the United States, Canada, Northern and Western Europe, New Zealand, and Australia | Children housed in congregate settings, including homeless shelters, juvenile detention centers, immigration and customs enforcement detention facilities, or other group-based housing are at higher risk for TB infection |
Risk Factors for Progression From TB Infection to Disease | ||
Immunosuppression | Chronic Medical Conditions | Timing of Infection |
HIV infection | Diabetes | Recent TB infection (ie, within the past 2 years) |
Other immune deficiencies | Chronic renal disease | |
Solid organ transplant recipients | Malnutrition | |
On immunosuppressive therapy (eg, tumor necrosis factor antagonists, chemotherapy) | ||
Age < 2 years, 10–18 years |
TB = tuberculosis.