Spoligotyping patterns and drug resistant of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Sudan
Files
Date
2009
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Al Neelain University
Abstract
.
Sudan has a high burden of tuberculosis with an estimated 93,000
new cases each year. The purpose of this study was to investigate the
genotypic patterns of
M. tuberculosis
strains circulating in Sudan and to
assess their susceptibly to anti-tuberculosis drugs. Isolates from 237 smear
positive tuberculosis patients were collected from different geographic
regions of the country. Spoligotyping was performed by the Kamerbeek
method and results were compared with the international SpolDB4 database
(Institut Pasteur, Guadeloupe).
Results revealed 28 clusters ranging in size from 12 to 57 isolates.
Seventy unique (unclustered) strains were observed, representing 30% of
the strains examined. The most frequently observed spoligotype patterns
belonged to the CAS family which represented 115 (48.5%) of isolates
studied. T1, H3, U and Beijing strains were found in 12 (5.1%), 11 (4.6%),
7 (3%) and 6 (2.5%) patients respectively. Strains belonging to the Beijing
family were found mainly in Western Sudan. Resistance to isoniazid,
rifampicin, ethambutol and streptomycin was observed in 18.1, 22.4, 22.2
and 32% of strains respectively. Twenty patients (8.4%) had MDR-TB of
which 10 were new cases. Seventeen patients with rifampicin resistant
tuberculosis were infected with CAS1-DELHI strains matching SIT 25 of
the SpolDB4 database and 3 were of the SIT 1 Beijing family. 15 loci
MIRU-VNTR typing subdivided the 17 CAS strains into one cluster of 5,
two clusters of 2 and 8 individual MIRU types. Similarly the 3 Beijing
spoligotypes were differentiated into a cluster of 2 and a single strain.
x
The use of molecular strain typing provides a proactive approach that
may be used to initiate, and not just augment, traditional surveillance
outbreak investigation in Sudan. However, caution must be used when
interpreting clustered spoligotype patterns in this region
Description
Keywords
Molecular Microbiology
