Comparative genomic analyses of multi-drug resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis from Nepal and other geographical locations

Nepal exhibits a tuberculosis (TB) incidence rate that is comparable to neighbouring high TB incidence countries. In addition, it records >500 cases of multi-drug resistant (MDR) TB each year. The objective of this study was to perform whole-genome bioinformatic analysis on MDR-TB isolates from N...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genomics (San Diego, Calif.) Calif.), 2022-03, Vol.114 (2), p.110278-110278, Article 110278
Hauptverfasser: Leong, Kelvin W.C., Gautam, Sanjay S., Pradhan, Manoj, Singh, Y. Ibotomba, KC, Rajendra, Rajbhandari, Sagar K., Ghimire, Gokarna R., Adhikari, Krishna, Shrestha, Uma, Chaudhary, Raina, Ghimire, Gyanendra, Khadka, Sundar, O'Toole, Ronan F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nepal exhibits a tuberculosis (TB) incidence rate that is comparable to neighbouring high TB incidence countries. In addition, it records >500 cases of multi-drug resistant (MDR) TB each year. The objective of this study was to perform whole-genome bioinformatic analysis on MDR-TB isolates from Nepal (n = 19) to identify the specific mutations underlying their phenotypic resistance. In addition, we examined the dominant genotype among the Nepal MDR-TB isolates, the East-Asian Beijing sub-lineage, to determine its relatedness to a panel of 1274 genomes of international strains available from public databases. These analyses provided evidence that the XDR-TB isolates in our collection were not derived from importation of primary XDR-TB to Nepal but were more likely the result of acquisition of second-line drug resistance in Nepal. Resistance to fluoroquinolones was detected among a high proportion of the Nepal isolates. This has implications for the management of TB, including appropriate antimicrobial stewardship and susceptibility testing for fluoroquinolones and other second-line TB drugs, to minimise the development of XDR-TB among Nepal TB cases. •Genetic mutations for resistance to first- and second-line TB drugs were determined in MDR/XDR M. tuberculosis from Nepal.•SNP and cgMLST analyses indicate that the XDR-TB isolates examined here emerged from local MDR-TB isolates in Nepal.
ISSN:0888-7543
1089-8646
DOI:10.1016/j.ygeno.2022.110278