Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2019)

Simplified Model to Survey Tuberculosis Transmission in Countries Without Systematic Molecular Epidemiology Programs

  • Juan Domínguez,
  • Fermín Acosta,
  • Laura Pérez-Lago,
  • Dilcia Sambrano,
  • Victoria Batista,
  • Carolina De La Guardia,
  • Estefanía Abascal,
  • Álvaro Chiner-Oms,
  • Iñaki Comas,
  • Prudencio González,
  • Jaime Bravo,
  • Pedro Del Cid,
  • Samantha Rosas,
  • Patricia Muñoz,
  • Amador Goodridge,
  • Darío García de Viedma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2503.181593
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 3
pp. 507 – 514

Abstract

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Systematic molecular/genomic epidemiology studies for tuberculosis surveillance cannot be implemented in many countries. We selected Panama as a model for an alternative strategy. Mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit–variable-number tandem-repeat (MIRU-VNTR) analysis revealed a high proportion (50%) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates included in 6 clusters (A–F) in 2 provinces (Panama and Colon). Cluster A corresponded to the Beijing sublineage. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) differentiated clusters due to active recent transmission, with low single-nucleotide polymorphism–based diversity (cluster C), from clusters involving long-term prevalent strains with higher diversity (clusters A, B). Prospective application in Panama of 3 tailored strain–specific PCRs targeting marker single-nucleotide polymorphisms identified from WGS data revealed that 31.4% of incident cases involved strains A–C and that the Beijing strain was highly represented and restricted mainly to Colon. Rational integration of MIRU-VNTR, WGS, and tailored strain–specific PCRs could be a new model for tuberculosis surveillance in countries without molecular/genomic epidemiology programs.

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