4.7 Article

Reemergence and Amplification of Tuberculosis in the Canadian Arctic

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 211, Issue 12, Pages 1905-1914

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiv011

Keywords

infectious disease outbreaks; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; molecular epidemiology; whole genome sequencing; transmission

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (MOP) [125858]

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Background. Between November 2011 and November 2012, a Canadian village of 933 persons had 50 culture-positive cases of tuberculosis, with 49 sharing the same genotype. Methods.aEuro integral We performed Illumina-based whole-genome sequencing on Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from this village, during and before the outbreak. Phylogenetic trees were generated using the maximum likelihood method. Results.aEuro integral Three distinct genotypes were identified. Strain I (n = 7) was isolated in 1991-1996. Strain II (n = 8) was isolated in 1996-2004. Strain III (n = 62) first appeared in 2007 and did not arise from strain I or II. Within strain III, there were 3 related but distinct clusters: IIIA, IIIB, and IIIC. Between 2007 and 2010, cluster IIIA predominated (11 of 22 vs 2 of 40; P < .001), whereas in 2011-2012 clusters IIIB (n = 18) and IIIC (n = 20) predominated over cluster IIIA (n = 11). Combined evolutionary and epidemiologic analysis of strain III cases revealed that the outbreak in 2011-2012 was the result of a parts per thousand yen6 temporally staggered events, spanning from 1 reactivation case to a point-source outbreak of 20 cases. Conclusions.aEuro integral After the disappearance of 2 strains of M. tuberculosis in this village, its reemergence in 2007 was followed by an epidemiologic amplification, affecting > 5% of the population.

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