TY - JOUR KW - Adolescent KW - Adult KW - Aged KW - Biopsy KW - Child KW - Child, Preschool KW - DNA Fingerprinting KW - DNA, Bacterial KW - Female KW - genotype KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Male KW - Middle Aged KW - Minisatellite Repeats KW - Molecular Epidemiology KW - Mycobacterium leprae KW - Philippines KW - Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide KW - Rural Population KW - Skin KW - Urban Population KW - Young Adult AU - Sakamuri RM AU - Kimura M AU - Li W AU - Kim H AU - Lee H AU - Kiran MD AU - Black W AU - Balagon M AU - Gelber R AU - Cho S AU - Brennan PJ AU - Vissa V AB -

To address the persisting problem of leprosy in Cebu, Philippines, we compiled a database of more than 200 patients who attend an established referral skin clinic. We described the patient characteristics in conventional demographic parameters and also applied multiple-locus variable-number tandem-repeat (VNTR) analysis (MLVA) and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) typing for Mycobacterium leprae in biopsied skin lesion samples. These combined approaches revealed that transmission is ongoing, with the affected including the young Cebuano population under 40 years of age in both crowded cities and rural areas of the island. The emergence of multicase families (MCF) is indicative of infection unconstrained by standard care measures. For the SNPs, we designed a low-cost PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism typing method. MLVA in M. leprae was highly discriminatory in this population yet could retain broad groups, as defined by the more stable SNPs, implying temporal marker stability suitable for interpreting population structures and evolution. The majority of isolates belong to an Asian lineage (SNP type 1), and the rest belong to a putative postcolonial lineage (SNP type 3). Specific alleles at two VNTR loci, (GGT)5 and 21-3, were highly associated with SNP type 3 in this population. MLVA identified M. leprae genotype associations for patients with known epidemiological links such as in MCFs and in some villages. These methods provide a molecular database and a rational framework for targeted approaches to search and confirm leprosy transmission in various scenarios.

BT - Journal of clinical microbiology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19571027?dopt=Abstract DA - 2009 Sep DO - 10.1128/JCM.02021-08 IS - 9 J2 - J. Clin. Microbiol. LA - eng N2 -

To address the persisting problem of leprosy in Cebu, Philippines, we compiled a database of more than 200 patients who attend an established referral skin clinic. We described the patient characteristics in conventional demographic parameters and also applied multiple-locus variable-number tandem-repeat (VNTR) analysis (MLVA) and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) typing for Mycobacterium leprae in biopsied skin lesion samples. These combined approaches revealed that transmission is ongoing, with the affected including the young Cebuano population under 40 years of age in both crowded cities and rural areas of the island. The emergence of multicase families (MCF) is indicative of infection unconstrained by standard care measures. For the SNPs, we designed a low-cost PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism typing method. MLVA in M. leprae was highly discriminatory in this population yet could retain broad groups, as defined by the more stable SNPs, implying temporal marker stability suitable for interpreting population structures and evolution. The majority of isolates belong to an Asian lineage (SNP type 1), and the rest belong to a putative postcolonial lineage (SNP type 3). Specific alleles at two VNTR loci, (GGT)5 and 21-3, were highly associated with SNP type 3 in this population. MLVA identified M. leprae genotype associations for patients with known epidemiological links such as in MCFs and in some villages. These methods provide a molecular database and a rational framework for targeted approaches to search and confirm leprosy transmission in various scenarios.

PY - 2009 SP - 2844 EP - 54 T2 - Journal of clinical microbiology TI - Population-based molecular epidemiology of leprosy in Cebu, Philippines. UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2738081/pdf/2021-08.pdf VL - 47 SN - 1098-660X ER -