High strain diversity among isoniazid-resistant M tuberculosis isolates from the Free State and Northern Cape provinces

Authors

  • Zac Mokhethi University of the Free State
  • Anneke van der Spoel-van Dijk University of the Free State
  • Adri van der Zanden Laboratory for Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, The Netherlands
  • Leen Rigouts Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.38140/aa.v0i1.1045

Abstract

This study set out to determine the diversity of the isoniazid-resistant M tuberculosis isolates causing pulmonary tuberculosis in the Free State and Northern Cape provinces of South Africa. Thirty-seven isoniazid-resistant isolates from a nation-wide survey could be fingerprinted by IS6110-based RFLP. Spoligotyping and MIRU-VNTR typing were performed to confirm inconclusive results. The number of IS6110 copies per isolate varied from 2 to 18, with nine (24.3%) isolates harbouring five insertions or fewer. Nine (24.3%) of 37 cases grouped into four RFLP-clusters. The clustered isolates with fewer than five IS6110 copies were all shown to be different when   subjected to spoligotyping and MIRU-VNTR typing, whereas the clustering of the high-copy isolates was confirmed. The high degree of diversity among H-resistant isolates in the Free State suggests a low recent transmission rate, but this should be investigated by long-term analyses. For the Northern Cape province, representative sampling is needed before proper conclusions can be drawn.

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Published

2005-01-28

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Articles