Widespread dissemination of a drug-susceptible strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

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Abstract

In New York City, a large proportion of new tuberculosis cases has been caused by 1 drug-susceptible strain (called C strain) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Between 1991 and 1994, among >600 tuberculosis patients consecutively identified in four large hospitals in the city, 54 with C strain, 69 with non-C cluster pattern strains, and 42 with noncluster pattern strains were studied. Susceptibility to reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) of selected isolates was compared. In a case-control analysis, 51% of patients with C strain, 28% with non-C cluster strains (P < .05), and 14% with noncluster strains (P < .01) were found to be injection drug users. C strain but not 13 other unrelated isolates were resistant to RNI. Injection drug use may provide a selective pressure for an RNI-resistant tubercle bacillus to emerge, which may give the organism a biologic advantage and explain the widespread dissemination of C strain M. tuberculosis within the city.

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Friedman, C. R., Quinn, G. C., Kreiswirth, B. N., Perlman, D. C., Salomon, N., Schluger, N., … Riley, W. L. (1997). Widespread dissemination of a drug-susceptible strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 176(2), 478–484. https://doi.org/10.1086/514067

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