PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

The Association between Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Genotype and Drug Resistance in Peru.

  • Louis Grandjean,
  • Tomotada Iwamoto,
  • Anna Lithgow,
  • Robert H Gilman,
  • Kentaro Arikawa,
  • Noriko Nakanishi,
  • Laura Martin,
  • Edith Castillo,
  • Valentina Alarcon,
  • Jorge Coronel,
  • Walter Solano,
  • Minoo Aminian,
  • Claudia Guezala,
  • Nalin Rastogi,
  • David Couvin,
  • Patricia Sheen,
  • Mirko Zimic,
  • David A J Moore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126271
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. e0126271

Abstract

Read online

The comparison of Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacterial genotypes with phenotypic, demographic, geospatial and clinical data improves our understanding of how strain lineage influences the development of drug-resistance and the spread of tuberculosis.To investigate the association of Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacterial genotype with drug-resistance. Drug susceptibility testing together with genotyping using both 15-loci MIRU-typing and spoligotyping, was performed on 2,139 culture positive isolates, each from a different patient in Lima, Peru. Demographic, geospatial and socio-economic data were collected using questionnaires, global positioning equipment and the latest national census.The Latin American Mediterranean (LAM) clade (OR 2.4, p<0.001) was significantly associated with drug-resistance and alone accounted for more than half of all drug resistance in the region. Previously treated patients, prisoners and genetically clustered cases were also significantly associated with drug-resistance (OR's 2.5, 2.4 and 1.8, p<0.001, p<0.05, p<0.001 respectively).Tuberculosis disease caused by the LAM clade was more likely to be drug resistant independent of important clinical, genetic and socio-economic confounding factors. Explanations for this include; the preferential co-evolution of LAM strains in a Latin American population, a LAM strain bacterial genetic background that favors drug-resistance or the "founder effect" from pre-existing LAM strains disproportionately exposed to drugs.