Abstract
BackgroundTuberculosis (TB) surveillance programs in Canada have established that TB in Canada is becoming a disease of geographically and demographically distinct groups. In 1995, treaty status aboriginals from the province of Manitoba accounted for 46% of the disease burden of this sub-group in Canada. The TB incidence rates are dramatically high in certain reserves of Manitoba and are equivalent to rates in African countries. The objective of our study was to identify prevalent isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the patient population of Manitoba using molecular epidemiology tools, studying the patient demographics associated with the prevalent strain and studying the in vitro cytokine profiles post-infection with the predominant strain.MethodsMolecular typing was performed on all isolates available between 1992 to1997. A clinical database was generated using patient information from Manitoba. THP-1 cells were infected using strains of M. tuberculosis and cytokine profiles were determined using immunoassays for cytokines IL-1β, IL-10, IL-12, IFN-γ and TNF-α.ResultsIn Manitoba, 24% of the disease burden is due to a particular M. tuberculosis strain (Type1). The strain is common in patients of aboriginal decent and is responsible for at least 87% of these cases. Cytokine assays indicate that the Type1 strain induces comparatively lower titers of IL-1β, IFN-γ and TNF-α in infected THP-1 cells as compared to H37Ra and H37Rv strains.ConclusionIn Manitoba, Type1 strain is predominant in TB patients. The majority of the cases infected with this particular strain are newly active with a high incidence of respiratory disease, positive chest radiographs and pulmonary cavities. In vitro secretion of IL-1β, IFN-γ and TNF-α is suppressed in Type1 infected culture samples when compared to H37Ra and H37Rv infected cells.
Highlights
Tuberculosis (TB) surveillance programs in Canada have established that TB in Canada is becoming a disease of geographically and demographically distinct groups
There are 194 M. tuberculosis strains isolated from 479 patients from Manitoba and the top 5 strains are Type1, Type5, Type2, Type72, Type71 that are responsible for 24%, 5%, 4.6%, 4.2% and 2% of the total TB cases, respectively
The majority of treaty and non-treaty status aboriginal people (100/115 cases; 87%) had this Type1 strain isolated from their cultures
Summary
Tuberculosis (TB) surveillance programs in Canada have established that TB in Canada is becoming a disease of geographically and demographically distinct groups. In Manitoba, the composition of TB patients is distinctly different from that of other Canadian provinces as the majority of TB cases are among Canadian-born individuals, with the highest incidence among treaty (registered) aboriginals (48.4 per 100,000 overall, with rates as high as 496.3 per 100,000 in select communities) [3]. Canadian surveillance studies have shown that TB is prevalent in geographically and demographically distinct groups, such as, foreign-born and aboriginal individuals [5]. These groups have sustained a steady level of incidence and are in need of targeted TB control measures, with treaty status sub-population contributing to the majority of the current burden of incident cases [5]. The incidence rate of TB in treaty status aboriginals is probably an underestimate as the number of aboriginal individuals that have not claimed treaty status is unknown
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