1. Molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis in rural Matlab, Bangladesh.
- Author
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Banu S, Uddin MK, Islam MR, Zaman K, Ahmed T, Talukder AH, Rahman MT, Rahim Z, Akter N, Khatun R, Brosch R, and Endtz HP
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bacterial Typing Techniques methods, Bangladesh epidemiology, Cluster Analysis, Female, Humans, Latent Tuberculosis epidemiology, Latent Tuberculosis microbiology, Latent Tuberculosis transmission, Male, Middle Aged, Mycobacterium tuberculosis genetics, Rural Population, Tandem Repeat Sequences, Tuberculosis microbiology, Tuberculosis transmission, Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant microbiology, Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant transmission, Young Adult, Molecular Epidemiology methods, Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolation & purification, Tuberculosis epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To characterise and classify clinical isolates collected from tuberculosis (TB) patients in rural Bangladesh and to investigate the mode of transmission., Design: An epidemiological study using a combination of conventional and molecular methods was performed in a rural population of Bangladesh. A total of 168 clinical isolates were collected from TB patients. Deletion analysis, used for rapid differentiation of members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, spoligotyping and variable number tandem repeats of mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units (VNTR-MIRU) typing were used., Results: Deletion analysis identified all isolates as M. tuberculosis and further divided them into 109 strains (65%) carrying the M. tuberculosis deletion region 1 (TbD1-intact or 'ancestral' strains) and 59 strains (35%) lacking this region (TbD1 or 'modern' strains). MIRU analyses showed that 149 strains (89%) had unique patterns, whereas 19 strains (11%) clustered into eight groups. The largest cluster comprised five TbD1 strains of the Beijing type. The rate of recent transmission was estimated to be 6.5%., Conclusions: Our results suggest that TB in rural Bangladesh is caused primarily by reactivation of latent infections involving TbD1 intact strains, overlaid with the recent emergence of Beijing strain clusters that include multidrug-resistant isolates.
- Published
- 2012
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