Abstract

The dramatic change in global health imposed by the Covid-19 pandemic has also impacted TB control. The TB incidence decreased dramatically not because of the improved situation but due to undertesting, reduced resources, and ultimately, substantially reduced detection rate. We hypothesized that multiple and partly counteracting factors could influence changes in the local Mycobacterium tuberculosis population. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed M. tuberculosis isolates collected in Western Siberia, Russia, before and during the Covid-19 pandemic. A total of 269 M. tuberculosis isolates from patients admitted at referral clinics were studied. The pre-pandemic and pandemic collections included 179 and 90 isolates, respectively. Based on genotyping, both pre-pandemic and pandemic samples are heavily dominated by the Beijing genotype isolates (95% and 88%) that were mostly MDR (80 and 68%). The high proportion of MDR isolates is due to the specific features of the studied collections biased towards patients with severe TB admitted at the National referral center in Novosibirsk. While no dramatic change was observed in the M. tuberculosis population structure in the survey area in Western Siberia during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020–2021 compared to the pre-pandemic collection, still we note a certain decrease of the Beijing genotype and an increase in the proportion and diversity of the non-Beijing isolates. However, the transmissible and MDR Beijing B0/W148 did not increase its prevalence rate during the pandemic. More generally, the high prevalence rate of the Beijing genotype and its strong association with MDR both before and during the pandemic are alarming features of this region in Western Siberia, Russia.

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