Representativeness of tuberculosis genotyping surveillance in the United States, 2009–2010

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Abstract

Genotyping of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates contributes to tuberculosis (TB) control through detection of possible outbreaks. However, 20% of U.S. cases do not have an isolate for testing, and 10% of cases with isolates do not have a genotype reported. TB outbreaks in populations with incomplete genotyping data might be missed by genotyping-based outbreak detection. Therefore, we assessed the representativeness of TB genotyping data by comparing characteristics of cases reported during January 1, 2009–December 31, 2010, that had a genotype result with those cases that did not. Of 22,476 cases, 14,922 (66%) had a genotype result. Cases without genotype results were more likely to be patients ,19 years of age, with unknown HIV status, of female sex, U.S.-born, and with no recent history of homelessness or substance abuse. Although cases with a genotype result are largely representative of all reported U.S. TB cases, outbreak detection methods that rely solely on genotyping data may underestimate TB transmission among certain groups.

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Shak, E. B., France, A. M., Cowan, L., Starks, A. M., & Grant, J. (2015). Representativeness of tuberculosis genotyping surveillance in the United States, 2009–2010. Public Health Reports, 130(6), 596–601. https://doi.org/10.1177/003335491513000607

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