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Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses

Tuberculosis is a leading public health priority in eastern Malaysia. Knowledge of the genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis can help tailor public health interventions. Our aims were to determine tuberculosis genomic epidemiology and characterize resistance mutations in the ethnically diverse city o...

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Autores principales: Bainomugisa, Arnold, Meumann, Ella M., Rajahram, Giri Shan, Ong, Rick Twee-Hee, Coin, Lachlan, Paul, Dawn Carmel, William, Timothy, Coulter, Christopher, Ralph, Anna P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Microbiology Society 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8209721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33945455
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000573
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author Bainomugisa, Arnold
Meumann, Ella M.
Rajahram, Giri Shan
Ong, Rick Twee-Hee
Coin, Lachlan
Paul, Dawn Carmel
William, Timothy
Coulter, Christopher
Ralph, Anna P.
author_facet Bainomugisa, Arnold
Meumann, Ella M.
Rajahram, Giri Shan
Ong, Rick Twee-Hee
Coin, Lachlan
Paul, Dawn Carmel
William, Timothy
Coulter, Christopher
Ralph, Anna P.
author_sort Bainomugisa, Arnold
collection PubMed
description Tuberculosis is a leading public health priority in eastern Malaysia. Knowledge of the genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis can help tailor public health interventions. Our aims were to determine tuberculosis genomic epidemiology and characterize resistance mutations in the ethnically diverse city of Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, located at the nexus of Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines and Brunei. We used an archive of prospectively collected Mycobacterium tuberculosis samples paired with epidemiological data. We collected sputum and demographic data from consecutive consenting outpatients with pulmonary tuberculosis at the largest tuberculosis clinic from 2012 to 2014, and selected samples from tuberculosis inpatients from the tertiary referral centre during 2012–2014 and 2016–2017. Two hundred and eight M . tuberculosis sequences were available for analysis, representing 8 % of cases notified during the study periods. Whole-genome phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that most strains were lineage 1 (195/208, 93.8 %), with the remainder being lineages 2 (8/208, 3.8 %) or 4 (5/208, 2.4 %). Lineages or sub-lineages were not associated with patient ethnicity. The lineage 1 strains were diverse, with sub-lineage 1.2.1 being dominant (192, 98 %). Lineage 1.2.1.3 isolates were geographically most widely distributed. The greatest diversity occurred in a border town sub-district. The time to the most recent common ancestor for the three major lineage 1.2.1 clades was estimated to be the year 1966 (95 % HPD 1948–1976). An association was found between failure of culture conversion by week 8 of treatment and infection with lineage 2 (4/6, 67 %) compared with lineage 1 strains (4/83, 5 %) (P<0.001), supporting evidence of greater virulence of lineage 2 strains. Eleven potential transmission clusters (SNP difference ≤12) were identified; at least five included people living in different sub-districts. Some linked cases spanned the whole 4-year study period. One cluster involved a multidrug-resistant tuberculosis strain matching a drug-susceptible strain from 3 years earlier. Drug resistance mutations were uncommon, but revealed one phenotype–genotype mismatch in a genotypically multidrug-resistant isolate, and rare nonsense mutations within the katG gene in two isolates. Consistent with the regionally mobile population, M. tuberculosis strains in Kota Kinabalu were diverse, although several lineage 1 strains dominated and were locally well established. Transmission clusters – uncommonly identified, likely attributable to incomplete sampling – showed clustering occurring across the community, not confined to households or sub-districts. The findings indicate that public health priorities should include active case finding and early institution of tuberculosis management in mobile populations, while there is a need to upscale effective contact investigation beyond households to include other contacts within social networks.
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spelling pubmed-82097212021-06-17 Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses Bainomugisa, Arnold Meumann, Ella M. Rajahram, Giri Shan Ong, Rick Twee-Hee Coin, Lachlan Paul, Dawn Carmel William, Timothy Coulter, Christopher Ralph, Anna P. Microb Genom Research Articles Tuberculosis is a leading public health priority in eastern Malaysia. Knowledge of the genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis can help tailor public health interventions. Our aims were to determine tuberculosis genomic epidemiology and characterize resistance mutations in the ethnically diverse city of Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, located at the nexus of Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines and Brunei. We used an archive of prospectively collected Mycobacterium tuberculosis samples paired with epidemiological data. We collected sputum and demographic data from consecutive consenting outpatients with pulmonary tuberculosis at the largest tuberculosis clinic from 2012 to 2014, and selected samples from tuberculosis inpatients from the tertiary referral centre during 2012–2014 and 2016–2017. Two hundred and eight M . tuberculosis sequences were available for analysis, representing 8 % of cases notified during the study periods. Whole-genome phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that most strains were lineage 1 (195/208, 93.8 %), with the remainder being lineages 2 (8/208, 3.8 %) or 4 (5/208, 2.4 %). Lineages or sub-lineages were not associated with patient ethnicity. The lineage 1 strains were diverse, with sub-lineage 1.2.1 being dominant (192, 98 %). Lineage 1.2.1.3 isolates were geographically most widely distributed. The greatest diversity occurred in a border town sub-district. The time to the most recent common ancestor for the three major lineage 1.2.1 clades was estimated to be the year 1966 (95 % HPD 1948–1976). An association was found between failure of culture conversion by week 8 of treatment and infection with lineage 2 (4/6, 67 %) compared with lineage 1 strains (4/83, 5 %) (P<0.001), supporting evidence of greater virulence of lineage 2 strains. Eleven potential transmission clusters (SNP difference ≤12) were identified; at least five included people living in different sub-districts. Some linked cases spanned the whole 4-year study period. One cluster involved a multidrug-resistant tuberculosis strain matching a drug-susceptible strain from 3 years earlier. Drug resistance mutations were uncommon, but revealed one phenotype–genotype mismatch in a genotypically multidrug-resistant isolate, and rare nonsense mutations within the katG gene in two isolates. Consistent with the regionally mobile population, M. tuberculosis strains in Kota Kinabalu were diverse, although several lineage 1 strains dominated and were locally well established. Transmission clusters – uncommonly identified, likely attributable to incomplete sampling – showed clustering occurring across the community, not confined to households or sub-districts. The findings indicate that public health priorities should include active case finding and early institution of tuberculosis management in mobile populations, while there is a need to upscale effective contact investigation beyond households to include other contacts within social networks. Microbiology Society 2021-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8209721/ /pubmed/33945455 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000573 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial License.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Bainomugisa, Arnold
Meumann, Ella M.
Rajahram, Giri Shan
Ong, Rick Twee-Hee
Coin, Lachlan
Paul, Dawn Carmel
William, Timothy
Coulter, Christopher
Ralph, Anna P.
Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses
title Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses
title_full Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses
title_fullStr Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses
title_full_unstemmed Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses
title_short Genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern Malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses
title_sort genomic epidemiology of tuberculosis in eastern malaysia: insights for strengthening public health responses
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8209721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33945455
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.000573
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