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Title: | Genetic Determinants of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis among HIV-Infected patients in Nigeria |
Authors: | Dinic, Lana Akande, Patrick Idigbe, Emmanuel Oni Ani, Agatha Onwujekwe, Dan Agbaji, Oche Akanbi, Maxwell Rita, Nwosu Adeniyi, Bukola Wahab, Maureen Lekuk, Chindak Kunle-Ope, Chioma Nwokoye, Nkiru Kanki, Phyllis |
Issue Date: | 14-Jun-2012 |
Publisher: | Journal of Clinical Microbiology |
Series/Report no.: | Vol.50;No.9;Pp 2905-2909 |
Abstract: | Tuberculosis (TB) is the most common opportunistic infection in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients and
the emergence of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) is a growing problem in resource-limited settings. Adequate infrastruc-
ture for testing drug sensitivity and sufficient evidence of first-line resistance are currently unavailable in Nigeria. We collected
sputum samples from HIV-infected patients enrolled in the Harvard PEPFAR/APIN Plus program over 12 months at two
PEPFAR antiretroviral therapy (ART) clinics in the southwest and north central regions in Nigeria. Smear-positive sputum sam-
ples were submitted for GenoType MTBDRplus testing (
n
415); mutations were confirmed through sequencing. Our results
show high rates of DR-TB in Nigerian HIV-infected individuals (7.0% for rifampin [RIF] and 9.3% for RIF or isoniazid [INH]).
Total RIF resistance indicative of MDR-TB in treatment-naive patients was 5.52%, far exceeding the World Health Organization
predictions (0 to 4.3%). RIF resistance was found in 6/213 (2.8%) cases, INH resistance was found in 3/215 (1.4%) cases, and
MDR-TB was found in 8/223 (3.6%) cases. We found significantly different amounts of DR-TB by location (18.18% in the south
of the country versus 3.91% in the north central region [
P
<
0.01]). Furthermore, RIF resistance was genetically distinct, sug-
gesting possible location-specific strains are responsible for the transmission of drug resistance (
P
<
0.04). Finally, GenoType
MTBDRplus correctly identified the drug-resistant samples compared to sequencing in 96.8% of cases. We found that total
DR-TB in HIV-infection is high and that transmission of drug-resistant TB in HIV-infected patients in Nigeria is higher than
predicted. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/324 |
Appears in Collections: | Medicine
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