The Lancet Microbe (Oct 2020)

Yaws re-emergence and bacterial drug resistance selection after mass administration of azithromycin: a genomic epidemiology investigation

  • Mathew A Beale, PhD,
  • Marc Noguera-Julian, PhD,
  • Charmie Godornes, BSc,
  • Maria Casadellà, PhD,
  • Camila González-Beiras, PhD,
  • Mariona Parera, BSc,
  • August Kapa Jnr, BSc,
  • Wendy Houinei, MPH,
  • James Wangi, MPH,
  • Marc Corbacho-Monne, MBBS,
  • Roger Paredes, PhD,
  • Fernando Gonzalez-Candelas, ProfPhD,
  • Michael Marks, PhD,
  • Sheila A Lukehart, ProfPhD,
  • Nicholas R Thomson, ProfPhD,
  • Oriol Mitjà, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 6
pp. e263 – e271

Abstract

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Summary: Background: In a longitudinal study assessing the WHO strategy for yaws eradication using mass azithromycin treatment, we observed resurgence of yaws cases with dominance of a single JG8 sequence type and emergence of azithromycin-resistant Treponema pallidum subspecies pertenue (T p pertenue). Here, we analyse genomic changes in the bacterial population using samples collected during the study. Methods: We did whole bacterial genome sequencing directly on DNA extracted from 37 skin lesion swabs collected from patients on Lihir Island, Papua New Guinea, between April 1, 2013, and Nov 1, 2016. We produced phylogenies and correlated these with spatiotemporal information to investigate the source of new cases and the emergence of five macrolide-resistant cases. We used deep amplicon sequencing of surveillance samples to assess the presence of minority macrolide-resistant populations. Findings: We recovered 20 whole T p pertenue genomes, and phylogenetic analysis showed that the re-emerging JG8 sequence type was composed of three bacterial sublineages characterised by distinct spatiotemporal patterns. Of five patients with resistant T p pertenue, all epidemiologically linked, we recovered genomes from three and found no variants. Deep sequencing showed that before treatment, the index patient had fixed macrolide-sensitive T p pertenue, whereas the post-treatment sample had a fixed resistant genotype, as did three of four contact cases. Interpretation: In this study, re-emergence of yaws cases was polyphyletic, indicating multiple epidemiological sources. However, given the genomic and epidemiological linkage of resistant cases and the rarity of resistance alleles in the general population, azithromycin resistance is likely to have evolved only once in this study, followed by onward dissemination. Funding: Wellcome and Provincial Deputation of Barcelona.