4 research outputs found
Drug resistance and genotypes of strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from human immunodeficiency virus-infected and non-infected tuberculosis patients in Bauru, São Paulo, Brazil
Little is known about transmission and drug resistance of tuberculosis (TB) in Bauru, State of São Paulo. The objective of this study was to evaluate risk factors for transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains in this area. Strains were collected from patients attended at ambulatory services in the region and susceptibility towards the main first line antibiotics was determined and fingerprinting performed. A total of 57 strains were submitted to susceptibility testing: 23 (42.6%) were resistant to at least one drug while 3 (13%) were resistant against both rifampicin and isoniazide. Resistant strains had been isolated from patients that had not (n = 13) or had (n = 9) previously been submitted to anti-TB treatment, demonstrating a preoccupying high level of primary resistance in the context of the study. All strains were submitted to IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (IS6110-RFLP) and double repetitive element PCR (DRE-PCR). Using IS6110-RFLP, 26.3% of the strains were clustered and one cluster of 3 patients included 2 HIV-infected individuals that had been hospitalized together during 16 days; clustering of strains of patients from the hospital was however not higher than that of patients attended at health posts. According to DRE-PCR, 55.3% belonged to a cluster, confirming the larger discriminatory power of IS6110-RFLP when compared to DRE-PCR, that should therefore be used as a screening procedure only. No clinical, epidemiological or microbiological characteristics were associated with clustering so risk factors for transmission of TB could not be defined in the present study
Drug Resistance and Genotypes of Strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolated from Human Immunodeficiency Virus-infected and Non-infected Tuberculosis Patients in Bauru, São Paulo, Brazil
Little is known about transmission and drug resistance of tuberculosis
(TB) in Bauru, State of São Paulo. The objective of this study was
to evaluate risk factors for transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
 strains in this area. Strains were collected from patients
attended at ambulatory services in the region and susceptibility
towards the main first line antibiotics was determined and
fingerprinting performed. A total of 57 strains were submitted to
susceptibility testing: 23 (42.6%) were resistant to at least one drug
while 3 (13%) were resistant against both rifampicin and isoniazide.
Resistant strains had been isolated from patients that had not (n = 13)
or had (n = 9) previously been submitted to anti-TB treatment,
demonstrating a preoccupying high level of primary resistance in the
context of the study. All strains were submitted to IS6110 restriction
fragment length polymorphism (IS6110-RFLP) and double repetitive
element PCR (DRE-PCR). Using IS6110-RFLP, 26.3% of the strains were
clustered and one cluster of 3 patients included 2 HIV-infected
individuals that had been hospitalized together during 16 days;
clustering of strains of patients from the hospital was however not
higher than that of patients attended at health posts. According to
DRE-PCR, 55.3% belonged to a cluster, confirming the larger
discriminatory power of IS6110-RFLP when compared to DRE-PCR, that
should therefore be used as a screening procedure only. No clinical,
epidemiological or microbiological characteristics were associated with
clustering so risk factors for transmission of TB could not be defined
in the present study
Spoligotyping and variable number tandem repeat analysis of Mycobacterium bovis isolates from cattle in Brazil
We performed spoligotyping and 12-mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit-variable number tandem repeats (MIRU-VNTRs) typing to characterise Mycobacterium bovis isolates collected from tissue samples of bovines with lesions suggestive for tuberculosis during slaughter inspection procedures in abattoirs in Brazil. High-quality genotypes were obtained with both procedures for 61 isolates that were obtained from 185 bovine tissue samples and all of these isolates were identified as M. bovis by conventional identification procedures. On the basis of the spoligotyping, 53 isolates were grouped into nine clusters and the remaining eight isolates were unique types, resulting in 17 spoligotypes. The majority of the Brazilian M. bovis isolates displayed spoligotype patterns that have been previously observed in strains isolated from cattle in other countries. MIRU-VNTR typing produced 16 distinct genotypes, with 53 isolates forming eight of the groups, and individual isolates with unique VNTR profiles forming the remaining eight groups. The allelic diversity of each VNTR locus was calculated and only two of the 12-MIRU-VNTR loci presented scores with either a moderate (0.4, MIRU16) or high (0.6, MIRU26) discriminatory index (h). Both typing methods produced similar discriminatory indexes (spoligotyping h = 0.85; MIRU-VNTR h = 0.86) and the combination of the two methods increased the h value to 0.94, resulting in 29 distinct patterns. These results confirm that spoligotyping and VNTR analysis are valuable tools for studying the molecular epidemiology of M. bovis infections in Brazil