Abstract

Objectives: The relative contributions of reactivation of latent infection and clusters of new infections to the overall incidence of tuberculosis in the U.K. is unknown. A study was carried out in North-West London to determine the feasibility of ISP6110 RFLP strain typing as a tool to investigate the relative contributions of these two sources.Methods: All available isolates of M. tuberculosis from specimens collected over a calendar year at three participating hospitals were typed by RFLP using an IS6110 probe. Isolates exhibiting a single band pattern were subject to further typing using an oligonucleotide direct repeat probe. Demographic and clinical information on cases was obtained from the National Survey of Tuberculosis Notifications in England and Wales and further information sought on clustered cases as identified by RFLP typing.Results: Twenty-seven (23%) of the 118 cases had shared IS6110 RFLP patterns. Strains from nine cases had single band patterns, but these were all distinguishable from each other when subjected to further typing by direct repeat probe. The remaining 18 cases belonged to eight clusters. Epidemiological links were established between all the patients in each cluster. The likelihood of being in a cluster was increased in cases with pulmonary smear-positive disease. It was lower in cases of Indian Sub-continent ethnic origin. For 10 of the 18 clustered cases epidemiological links had not been established by conventional contact tracing.Conclusions: Investigation of the relative contributions of reactivation of latent infection and new infection is feasible in a UK population, using IS6110 RFLP typing of M. tuberculosis isolates and epidemiological enquiries. This study in London identified clustered, presumably new cases, the majority of whom had not been linked epidemiologically. Comprehensive IS6110 RFLP typing of UK isolates would probably identify many clusters of incident tubercular infection.

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