PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

High prevalence of primary multidrug resistant tuberculosis in persons with no known risk factors.

  • Larissa Otero,
  • Fiorella Krapp,
  • Cristina Tomatis,
  • Carlos Zamudio,
  • Francine Matthys,
  • Eduardo Gotuzzo,
  • Patrick Van der Stuyft,
  • Carlos Seas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026276
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 10
p. e26276

Abstract

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IntroductionIn high multidrug resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB) prevalence areas, drug susceptibility testing (DST) at diagnosis is recommended for patients with risk factors for MDR. However, this approach might miss a substantial proportion of MDR-TB in the general population. We studied primary MDR in patients considered to be at low risk of MDR-TB in Lima, Peru.MethodsWe enrolled new sputum smear-positive TB patients who did not report any MDR-TB risk factor: known exposure to a TB patient whose treatment failed or who died or who was known to have MDR-TB; immunosuppressive co-morbidities, ex prison inmates; prison and health care workers; and alcohol or drug abuse. A structured questionnaire was applied to all enrolled participants to confirm the absence of these factors and thus minimize underreporting. Sputum from all participants was cultured on Löwenstein-Jensen media and DST for first line drugs was performed using the 7H10 agar method.ResultsOf 875 participants with complete data, 23.2% (203) had risk factors for MDR-TB elicited after enrolment. Among the group with no reported risk factors who had a positive culture, we found a 6.3% (95%CI 4.4-8.3) (37/584) rate of MDR-TB. In this group no epidemiological characteristics were associated with MDR-TB. Thus, in this group, multidrug resistance occurred in patients with no identifiable risk factors.ConclusionsWe found a high rate of primary MDR-TB in a general population with no identifiable risk factors for MDR-TB. This suggests that in a high endemic area targeting patients for MDR-TB based on the presence of risk factors is an insufficient intervention.