Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.

BACKGROUND: During the previous century Norway had a high incidence of tuberculosis, but no molecular epidemiological studies could be performed and these previously epidemic strains have been disappearing during the last decades. Currently, tuberculosis among native Norwegians is in the elimination...

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Main Authors: Wibeke Kinander, Torbjørn Bruvik, Ulf R Dahle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791218?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1ed150eba689483cbad6aa7bb8b882b42020-11-24T21:55:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-01-01412e837310.1371/journal.pone.0008373Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.Wibeke KinanderTorbjørn BruvikUlf R DahleBACKGROUND: During the previous century Norway had a high incidence of tuberculosis, but no molecular epidemiological studies could be performed and these previously epidemic strains have been disappearing during the last decades. Currently, tuberculosis among native Norwegians is in the elimination phase, and it is still not known what type of M. tuberculosis was so efficiently controlled during the second half of the 20th century. However, many elderly Norwegian-born people still develop TB that cannot be clustered to imported or recently transmitted strains of M. tuberculosis. Thus, the majority of these cases are results of reactivation of disease that was transmitted many decades ago. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A total of 213 strains of M. tuberculosis isolated during 1998-2005, from patients born in Norway before 1950 were genotyped in the current study. The findings demonstrated a highly homogenous M. tuberculosis population among the patients. A total of 40% belonged to the T-family, were 35% were assigned to T1 sub- family (T2 = 0, 93%, T3 = 1, 4% and T4 = 2, 3%). As many as 35% of the isolates belonged to the Haarlem family, were 15% were assigned to Haarlem1 and 19% to Haarlem3. The remaining 25% belonged to 15 different other families. The RFLP-patterns indicated that the isolates were not a result of recent transmission, but rather represented well established strains that apparently dominated in Norway many decades ago. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The T 1, Haarlem 1, and Haarlem 3 families of M. tuberculosis were abundant among patients born in Norway before 1950. The M. tuberculosis cases represented reactivated disease that had been acquired before 1994 and were likely to have been latent for several decades. Thus, the current study indicated that the T 1, Haarlem 1, and Haarlem 3 families may have been common in Norway, when tuberculosis represented a serious public health threat during the first half of the 20th century.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791218?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wibeke Kinander
Torbjørn Bruvik
Ulf R Dahle
spellingShingle Wibeke Kinander
Torbjørn Bruvik
Ulf R Dahle
Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Wibeke Kinander
Torbjørn Bruvik
Ulf R Dahle
author_sort Wibeke Kinander
title Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.
title_short Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.
title_full Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.
title_fullStr Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.
title_full_unstemmed Dominant Mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in Norway.
title_sort dominant mycobacterium tuberculosis lineages in elderly patients born in norway.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-01-01
description BACKGROUND: During the previous century Norway had a high incidence of tuberculosis, but no molecular epidemiological studies could be performed and these previously epidemic strains have been disappearing during the last decades. Currently, tuberculosis among native Norwegians is in the elimination phase, and it is still not known what type of M. tuberculosis was so efficiently controlled during the second half of the 20th century. However, many elderly Norwegian-born people still develop TB that cannot be clustered to imported or recently transmitted strains of M. tuberculosis. Thus, the majority of these cases are results of reactivation of disease that was transmitted many decades ago. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A total of 213 strains of M. tuberculosis isolated during 1998-2005, from patients born in Norway before 1950 were genotyped in the current study. The findings demonstrated a highly homogenous M. tuberculosis population among the patients. A total of 40% belonged to the T-family, were 35% were assigned to T1 sub- family (T2 = 0, 93%, T3 = 1, 4% and T4 = 2, 3%). As many as 35% of the isolates belonged to the Haarlem family, were 15% were assigned to Haarlem1 and 19% to Haarlem3. The remaining 25% belonged to 15 different other families. The RFLP-patterns indicated that the isolates were not a result of recent transmission, but rather represented well established strains that apparently dominated in Norway many decades ago. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The T 1, Haarlem 1, and Haarlem 3 families of M. tuberculosis were abundant among patients born in Norway before 1950. The M. tuberculosis cases represented reactivated disease that had been acquired before 1994 and were likely to have been latent for several decades. Thus, the current study indicated that the T 1, Haarlem 1, and Haarlem 3 families may have been common in Norway, when tuberculosis represented a serious public health threat during the first half of the 20th century.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791218?pdf=render
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