Bacterial and host determinants of cough aerosol culture positivity in patients with drug-resistant versus drug-susceptible tuberculosis.
Grant TheronJason D LimberisRouxjeane VenterLiezel SmithElize PietersenAliasgar EsmailGregory L CalligaroJulian Te RieleMarianna de KockPaul van HeldenTawanda GumboTaane Gregory ClarkKevin FennellyRobin WarrenKeertan DhedaPublished in: Nature medicine (2020)
A burgeoning epidemic of drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) threatens to derail global control efforts. Although the mechanisms remain poorly clarified, drug-resistant strains are widely believed to be less infectious than drug-susceptible strains. Consequently, we hypothesized that lower proportions of patients with drug-resistant TB would have culturable Mycobacterium tuberculosis from respirable, cough-generated aerosols compared to patients with drug-susceptible TB, and that multiple factors, including mycobacterial genomic variation, would predict culturable cough aerosol production. We enumerated the colony forming units in aerosols (≤10 µm) from 452 patients with TB (227 with drug resistance), compared clinical characteristics, and performed mycobacterial whole-genome sequencing, dormancy phenotyping and drug-susceptibility analyses on M. tuberculosis from sputum. After considering treatment duration, we found that almost half of the patients with drug-resistant TB were cough aerosol culture-positive. Surprisingly, neither mycobacterial genomic variants, lineage, nor dormancy status predicted cough aerosol culture positivity. However, mycobacterial sputum bacillary load and clinical characteristics, including a lower symptom score and stronger cough, were strongly predictive, thereby supporting targeted transmission-limiting interventions. Effective treatment largely abrogated cough aerosol culture positivity; however, this was not always rapid. These data question current paradigms, inform public health strategies and suggest the need to redirect TB transmission-associated research efforts toward host-pathogen interactions.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- multidrug resistant
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- acinetobacter baumannii
- water soluble
- public health
- escherichia coli
- copy number
- physical activity
- emergency department
- single cell
- high throughput
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- combination therapy
- drug delivery
- dna methylation
- replacement therapy
- electronic health record
- hiv infected
- hepatitis c virus
- genome wide
- deep learning
- sensitive detection
- antiretroviral therapy
- candida albicans