PLoS ONE (May 2010)

Influence of M. tuberculosis lineage variability within a clinical trial for pulmonary tuberculosis.

  • Payam Nahid,
  • Erin E Bliven,
  • Elizabeth Y Kim,
  • William R Mac Kenzie,
  • Jason E Stout,
  • Lois Diem,
  • John L Johnson,
  • Sebastien Gagneux,
  • Philip C Hopewell,
  • Midori Kato-Maeda,
  • Tuberculosis Trials Consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010753
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
p. e10753

Abstract

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Recent studies suggest that M. tuberculosis lineage and host genetics interact to impact how active tuberculosis presents clinically. We determined the phylogenetic lineages of M. tuberculosis isolates from participants enrolled in the Tuberculosis Trials Consortium Study 28, conducted in Brazil, Canada, South Africa, Spain, Uganda and the United States, and secondarily explored the relationship between lineage, clinical presentation and response to treatment. Large sequence polymorphisms and single nucleotide polymorphisms were analyzed to determine lineage and sublineage of isolates. Of 306 isolates genotyped, 246 (80.4%) belonged to the Euro-American lineage, with sublineage 724 predominating at African sites (99/192, 51.5%), and the Euro-American strains other than 724 predominating at non-African sites (89/114, 78.1%). Uneven distribution of lineages across regions limited our ability to discern significant associations, nonetheless, in univariate analyses, Euro-American sublineage 724 was associated with more severe disease at baseline, and along with the East Asian lineage was associated with lower bacteriologic conversion after 8 weeks of treatment. Disease presentation and response to drug treatment varied by lineage, but these associations were no longer statistically significant after adjustment for other variables associated with week-8 culture status.