Epidemiology of An Outbreak of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis in the U.K. Using Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism

1994 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 749-751 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Goyal ◽  
L. P. Ormerod ◽  
R. J. Shaw

1. Drug-resistant tuberculosis is a growing health care problem. When a series of cases occur, it is essential to know if patients with multidrug-resistant disease represent one or a number of separate outbreaks. 2. The epidemiology of an outbreak of isoniazid- and streptomycin-resistant tuberculosis in Blackburn was studied by restriction fragment length polymorphism using a probe for the IS6110 DNA sequence. 3. Mycobacterium tuberculosis from four cases of isoniazid- and streptomycin-resistant disease had an identical restriction fragment length polymorphism pattern. This pattern was not shared by drug-sensitive isolates of M. tuberculosis obtained from Blackburn (n = 8) or London (n = 13) or a M. tuberculosis isolate from a fifth Blackburn case which was resistant to isoniazid alone. 4. This methodology confirmed that all four cases of isoniazid- and streptomycin-resistant disease were part of a single epidemiologically related outbreak of drug-resistant disease. This study demonstrates how the epidemiology of an outbreak of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in the U.K. can be confirmed by restriction fragment length polymorphism.

1999 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 409-412 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Niemann ◽  
Elvira Richter ◽  
Sabine Rüsch-Gerdes

The stability of Mycobacterium tuberculosisIS6110 fingerprint patterns and spoligotypes has been assessed by analyzing serial isolates from patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis. Altogether, 165 M. tuberculosis isolates obtained from 56 patients have been analyzed. The time spans between the first and the last or a changed isolate from one patient ranged from 1 to 772 days. Among the 56 patients, 5 (9%) were infected with isolates with changes in their IS6110 fingerprint patterns. According to the total number of strains analyzed, 5% of the subsequent isolates showed variations in their IS6110restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns compared to the pattern of the first isolates. Up to 10 isolates from one patient sampled at time intervals of up to 772 days with no changes in their IS6110 patterns have been analyzed. A statistically significant correlation could be found between changes in insertion sequence (IS) patterns and the increased time intervals over which the isolates were obtained, whereas changes in IS patterns are not correlated to changes in the drug resistance of the isolates. In contrast to the observed variations in IS6110 fingerprint patterns, no changes in the spoligotypes of the isolates analyzed could be found. In conclusion, our results confirm that the IS6110 fingerprint patterns of M. tuberculosisisolates have high degrees of stability. Compared to IS6110, the direct repeat (DR) region, which is the basis for spoligotyping, has a lower rate of change. Partial deletions, e.g., deletions induced by homologous recombination between the repetitive DR elements, could not be detected in this study.


1999 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 788-791 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia Alito ◽  
Nora Morcillo ◽  
Silvia Scipioni ◽  
Alberto Dolmann ◽  
María I. Romano ◽  
...  

To study possible nosocomial transmission of multidrug-resistant (MDR) Mycobacterium tuberculosis, strain types and other information on 24, mostly human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients, were collected. Isolates from 11 patients had identical IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) patterns as well as spoligotype patterns and resistance profiles. Noticeably, nine other isolates from related cases also exhibited identical spoligotypes but slightly different RFLP patterns. These results indicate that for some MDR strains, the evolutionary clock of IS6110 RFLP may run too fast for reliable interpretation of strain typing results over a period of a few years.


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