RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Use of an IGRA test for prescribing latent TB infection therapy in 374 immigrants applying to night shelters in Milan, Italy JF European Respiratory Journal JO Eur Respir J FD European Respiratory Society SP p310 VO 38 IS Suppl 55 A1 Alice Repossi A1 Monica Delmastro A1 Maurizio Ferrarese A1 Giovanni Ferrara A1 Nicola Murgia A1 Luigi Codecasa YR 2011 UL http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/38/Suppl_55/p310.abstract AB The IFN-gamma tests for latent TB (IGRA) can aim preventive therapy (PT) to selected groups, reducing costs and resources. Homeless subjects (HS) have high risk for TB and for defaulting treatment. We evaluated the impact of Quantiferon TB Gold IT (QFT) in HS immigrants applying for night-shelter in Milan who, according to local TB guidelines based on TST ≥10 mm, normal Chest Xray and age ≤ 35 yrs, were candidate for PT. From Nov 2009 to Dec 2010, 1420 HS were referred to our Centre: 374 (37 F, 337 M, mean age 30 yrs) were eligible to PT and were offered IGRA testing with QFT. Twelve M refused; of the remaining: 187 were QFT+ (51.6%, M166, F 21), and 175 were QFT- (M159, F 16,), mean TST respectively 19.6 and 13.9 mm (P<0.0001).View this table:QFT results by nationalityHighest % of QFT+ were in Moroccans (75%), East-africans (67%), Rumanians (65%) Nigerians (60%) and Afghans 57% while lowest level were in other East-europeans (14%), other North-africans (24%) or West-africans (37%). Compared to other studies, our population shows a very high% of QFT+(>50%), especially in some nationalities and in Pts with TST>15 mm, partly decreasing the economic advantage of its use to reduce PTs. Better information on QFT role could be obtained extending this program to HS with TST ≤9 mm or age≥36 yrs but QFT technicalities and health-care budget cuts do not allow this wider on-field application.