Abstract

Patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) can be simultaneously infected with different strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (mixed infection). We investigated the prevalence and risk factors of mixed infection by Beijing and non-Beijing strains in pulmonary TB patients in Taiwan. We developed a quantitative PCR method to simultaneously detect the presence of Beijing and non-Beijing strains. A total of 868 pre-treatment samples (from 868 patients), including 563 sputum samples smear-positive for acid-fast bacilli and 305 liquid medium samples culture-positive for mycobacteria, were tested. Medical records of patients with culture-confirmed pulmonary TB were reviewed. The detection limit of our quantitative PCR method was five copies of target sequences. With mycobacterial culture result as the reference standard, the sensitivity and specificity of our quantitative PCR method were 95% and 98%, respectively. M. tuberculosis strains were isolated in 466 samples, of which 231 (49.6%) were infected with a Beijing strain. Another 14 patients (3.0%) had mixed infection, with the Beijing strain being the dominant strain in 13 (93%). Age <25 years with pulmonary cavities was associated with mixed infection. In patients infected with non-Beijing strains, the bacterial load of non-Beijing strains was lower among those with mixed infection than among those without. Our quantitative PCR method was accurate in detecting Beijing and non-Beijing strains in smear-positive sputum and culture-positive liquid medium samples. Mixed infection was present in pulmonary TB patients (3.0%), especially in those aged <25 years with pulmonary cavities. Beijing strains seem to be more dominant than non-Beijing strains in patients with mixed infection.

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