Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2002)

Molecular Epidemiology of Tuberculosis in a Sentinel Surveillance Population

  • Barbara A. Ellis,
  • Jack T. Crawford,
  • Christopher R. Braden,
  • Scott J. N. McNabb,
  • Marisa Moore,
  • Steve Kammerer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0811.020403
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
pp. 1197 – 1209

Abstract

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We conducted a population-based study to assess demographic and risk-factor correlates for the most frequently occurring Mycobacterium tuberculosis genotypes from tuberculosis (TB) patients. The study included all incident, culture-positive TB patients from seven sentinel surveillance sites in the United States from 1996 to 2000. M. tuberculosis isolates were genotyped by IS6110-based restriction fragment length polymorphism and spoligotyping. Genotyping was available for 90% of 11,923 TB patients. Overall, 48% of cases had isolates that matched those from another patient, including 64% of U.S.-born and 35% of foreign-born patients. By logistic regression analysis, risk factors for clustering of genotypes were being male, U.S.-born, black, homeless, and infected with HIV; having pulmonary disease with cavitations on chest radiograph and a sputum smear with acid-fast bacilli; and excessive drug or alcohol use. Molecular characterization of TB isolates permitted risk correlates for clusters and specific genotypes to be described and provided information regarding cluster dynamics over time.

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