4 research outputs found

    Detección de Mycobacterium tuberculosis, linaje Beijing, en Ecuador

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    Introduction: Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing lineage isolates are considered to be especially virulent, transmissible and prone to acquire resistances. Beijing strains have been reported worldwide, but studies in Latin America are still scarce. The only multinational study performed in the region indicated a heterogeneous distribution for this lineage, which was absent in Chile, Colombia and Ecuador, although further studies found the lineage in Chile and Colombia.Objective: To search for the presence of the Beijing lineage in Ecuador, the only country in the region where it remains unreported.Materials and methods: We obtained a convenience sample (2006-2012) from two hospitals covering different populations. The isolates were genotyped using 24-MIRU-VNTR. Lineages were assigned by comparing their patterns to those in the MIRU-VNTRplus platform. Isolates belonging to the Beijing lineage were confirmed by allele-specific PCR.Results: We identified the first Beijing isolate in Ecuador in an unexpected epidemiological scenario: A patient was infected in the Andean region, in a population with low mobility and far from the borders of the neighboring countries where Beijing strains had been previously reported.Conclusion: This is the first report of the presence of the Beijing lineage in Ecuador in an unusual epidemiological context that deserves special attention.Introducción. Los aislamientos de Mycobacterium tuberculosis pertenecientes al linaje Beijing se consideran especialmente virulentos y transmisibles, y con mayor tendencia a la adquisición de resistencia. El linaje Beijing se ha reportado en todo el mundo; sin embargo, en Latinoamérica los estudios al respecto son más escasos. En el único estudio multinacional llevado a cabo en la región, se detectó una distribución heterogénea del linaje, y no se le encontró en Chile, Colombia y Ecuador,aunque en estudios nacionales posteriores se identificaron aislamientos en Chile y Colombia.Objetivo. Rastrear la presencia del linaje Beijing de M. tuberculosis en Ecuador, único país en la región en el que aún no se reporta.Materiales y métodos. Se analizó una muestra de conveniencia (2006-2012) en dos hospitales que atendían poblaciones diferentes. La genotipificación de los aislamientos de M. tuberculosis se hizo mediante la plataforma 24-MIRU-VNTR. La asignación de linajes se hizo mediante la comparación de los patrones genotípicos con los incluidos en la plataforma MIRU-VNTRplus, y aquellos pertenecientes al linaje Beijing fueron confirmados mediante reacción en cadena de la polimerasa específica de alelo.Resultados. Se detectó el primer aislamiento Beijing en Ecuador, en una circunstancia epidemiológica inesperada: un paciente de la región andina, proveniente de una comunidad con escasa movilidad y alejada de las fronteras con los países limítrofes, Perú y Colombia, en los que ya se han identificado aislamientos de M. tuberculosis pertenecientes al linaje Beijing.Conclusiones. En este trabajo se reporta por primera vez la presencia del linaje Beijing de M. tuberculosis en Ecuador en un contexto epidemiológico inusual que merece especial atención

    Population-based sequencing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis reveals how current population dynamics are shaped by past epidemics

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    23 páginas, 4 figuras, 1 tabla.Transmission is a driver of tuberculosis (TB) epidemics in high-burden regions, with assumed negligible impact in low-burden areas. However, we still lack a full characterization of transmission dynamics in settings with similar and different burdens. Genomic epidemiology can greatly help to quantify transmission, but the lack of whole genome sequencing population-based studies has hampered its application. Here, we generate a population-based dataset from Valencia region and compare it with available datasets from different TB-burden settings to reveal transmission dynamics heterogeneity and its public health implications. We sequenced the whole genome of 785 Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains and linked genomes to patient epidemiological data. We use a pairwise distance clustering approach and phylodynamic methods to characterize transmission events over the last 150 years, in different TB-burden regions. Our results underscore significant differences in transmission between low-burden TB settings, i.e., clustering in Valencia region is higher (47.4%) than in Oxfordshire (27%), and similar to a high-burden area as Malawi (49.8%). By modeling times of the transmission links, we observed that settings with high transmission rate are associated with decades of uninterrupted transmission, irrespective of burden. Together, our results reveal that burden and transmission are not necessarily linked due to the role of past epidemics in the ongoing TB incidence, and highlight the need for in-depth characterization of transmission dynamics and specifically tailored TB control strategies.European Research Council 638553-TB-ACCELERATE; European Research Council 101001038-TBRECONNECT; Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación SAF2016-77346-RPeer reviewe

    Identification of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing lineage in Ecuador

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    Introduction: Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing lineage isolates are considered to be especially virulent, transmissible and prone to acquire resistances. Beijing strains have been reported worldwide, but studies in Latin America are still scarce. The only multinational study performed in the region indicated a heterogeneous distribution for this lineage, which was absent in Chile, Colombia and Ecuador, although further studies found the lineage in Chile and Colombia. Objective: To search for the presence of the Beijing lineage in Ecuador, the only country in the region where it remains unreported. Materials and methods: We obtained a convenience sample (2006-2012) from two hospitals covering different populations. The isolates were genotyped using 24-MIRU-VNTR. Lineages were assigned by comparing their patterns to those in the MIRU-VNTRplus platform. Isolates belonging to the Beijing lineage were confirmed by allele-specific PCR. Results: We identified the first Beijing isolate in Ecuador in an unexpected epidemiological scenario: A patient was infected in the Andean region, in a population with low mobility and far from the borders of the neighboring countries where Beijing strains had been previously reported. Conclusion: This is the first report of the presence of the Beijing lineage in Ecuador in an unusual epidemiological context that deserves special attention

    Prospective Multicenter Study of the Epidemiology, Molecular Identification, and Antifungal Susceptibility of Candida parapsilosis, Candida orthopsilosis, and Candida metapsilosis Isolated from Patients with Candidemia ▿

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    A 13-month prospective multicenter study including 44 hospitals was carried out to evaluate the epidemiology of Candida parapsilosis complex candidemia in Spain. Susceptibility to amphotericin B, flucytosine, fluconazole, itraconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole, anidulafungin, caspofungin, and micafungin was tested by the microdilution colorimetric method. A total of 364 C. parapsilosis complex isolates were identified by molecular methods: C. parapsilosis (90.7%), Candida orthopsilosis (8.2%), and Candida metapsilosis (1.1%). Most candidemias (C. parapsilosis, 76.4%; C. orthopsilosis, 70.0%; C. metapsilosis, 100%) were observed in adults. No C. orthopsilosis or C. metapsilosis candidemias occurred in neonates. C. parapsilosis was most frequent in adult intensive care unit (28.8%), surgery (20.9%), and internal medicine (19.7%) departments; and C. orthopsilosis was most frequent in hematology (28.6%), pediatrics (12.0%), and neonatology (11.5%) departments. The geographic distribution of C. orthopsilosis and C. metapsilosis was not uniform. According to CLSI clinical breakpoints, all C. orthopsilosis and C. metapsilosis isolates were susceptible to the nine agents tested. Resistance (MICs > 1 mg/liter) was observed only in C. parapsilosis: amphotericin B, posaconazole, itraconazole, and caspofungin (0.3% each), anidulafungin (1.9%), and micafungin (2.5%). Applying the new species-specific fluconazole and echinocandin breakpoints, the rates of resistance to fluconazole for C. parapsilosis and C. orthopsilosis increased to 4.8% and 0.3%, respectively; conversely, for C. parapsilosis they shifted from 1.9 to 0.6% (anidulafungin) and from 2.5 to 0.6% (micafungin). Our study confirms the different prevalence of C. parapsilosis complex candidemia among age groups: neither C. orthopsilosis nor C. metapsilosis was isolated from neonates; interestingly, C. metapsilosis was isolated only from adults and the elderly. The disparity in antifungal susceptibility among species could be important for therapy
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