Mathema Barun, Lewis James J, Connors Jeremy, Chihota Violet N, Shashkina Elena, van der Meulen Minty, Graviss Edward A, Ha Ngan P, Kreiswirth Barry N, Grant Alison D, Fielding Katherine L, Dorman Susan E, Churchyard Gavin J
1 Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2015 Jan;12(1):12-20. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201404-150OC.
HIV-associated tuberculosis remains a major health problem among the gold-mining workforce in South Africa. We postulate that high levels of recent transmission, indicated by strain clustering, are fueling the tuberculosis epidemic among gold miners.
To combine molecular and epidemiologic data to describe Mycobacterium tuberculosis genetic diversity, estimate levels of transmission, and examine risk factors for clustering.
We conducted a cross-sectional study of culture-positive M. tuberculosis isolates in 15 gold mine shafts across three provinces in South Africa. All isolates were subject IS6110-based restriction fragment length polymorphisms, and we performed spoligotyping analysis and combined it with basic demographic and clinical information.
Of the 1,602 M. tuberculosis patient isolates, 1,240 (78%) had genotyping data available for analysis. A highly diverse bacillary population was identified, comprising a total of 730 discrete genotypes. Four genotypic families (Latin American Mediterranean spoligotype family; W-Beijing; AH or X; and T1-T4) accounted for over 50% of all strains. Overall, 45% (560/1,240) of strains were genotypically clustered. The minimum estimate for recent transmission (n - 1 method) was 32% (range, 27-34%). There were no individual-level risk factors for clustering, apart from borderline evidence for being non-South African and having self-reported HIV infection.
The high M. tuberculosis genetic diversity and lack of risk factors for clustering are indicative of a universal risk for disease among gold miners and likely mixing with nonmining populations. Our results underscore the urgent need to intensify interventions to interrupt transmission across the entire gold-mining workforce in South Africa.
在南非金矿工人中,与艾滋病病毒相关的结核病仍然是一个主要的健康问题。我们推测,菌株聚类所表明的近期高传播水平正在推动金矿工人中的结核病流行。
结合分子和流行病学数据,描述结核分枝杆菌的遗传多样性,估计传播水平,并检查聚类的危险因素。
我们对南非三个省份15个金矿竖井中培养阳性的结核分枝杆菌分离株进行了横断面研究。所有分离株均进行基于IS6110的限制性片段长度多态性分析,我们进行了间隔寡核苷酸分型分析,并将其与基本人口统计学和临床信息相结合。
在1602株结核分枝杆菌患者分离株中,1240株(78%)有基因分型数据可供分析。鉴定出一个高度多样化的杆菌群体,共包括730个离散基因型。四个基因型家族(拉丁美洲地中海间隔寡核苷酸分型家族;W-北京;AH或X;以及T1-T4)占所有菌株的50%以上。总体而言,45%(560/1240)的菌株在基因上聚类。近期传播的最低估计值(n - 1法)为32%(范围为27 - 34%)。除了非南非籍和自我报告感染艾滋病病毒的边缘证据外,没有个体水平的聚类危险因素。
结核分枝杆菌的高遗传多样性和缺乏聚类危险因素表明金矿工人普遍面临患病风险,并且可能与非采矿人群有接触。我们的结果强调迫切需要加强干预措施,以中断南非整个金矿工人队伍中的传播。