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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 2005, p. 4473-4479, Vol. 43, No. 9
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/JCM.43.9.4473-4479.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Molecular Typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Unit-Variable-Number Tandem Repeat Analysis, a More Accurate Method for Identifying Epidemiological Links between Patients with Tuberculosis

Henk van Deutekom,1*,{dagger} Philip Supply,2,{dagger} Petra E. W. de Haas,3 Eve Willery,2 Susan P. Hoijng,1 Camille Locht,2 Roel A. Coutinho,1,4 and Dick van Soolingen3

Department of Tuberculosis Control, Municipal Health Service, Amsterdam, The Netherlands,1 Laboratoire des Mécanismes Moléculaires de la Pathogenese Bactérienne, INSERM U629, Institut Pasteur de Lille, Lille, France,2 Diagnostic Laboratory for Infectious Diseases and Perinatal Screening, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The Netherlands,3 Department of Human Retrovirology, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, The Netherlands4

Received 9 November 2004/ Returned for modification 23 December 2004/ Accepted 18 June 2005

IS6110 fingerprinting of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the standard identification method in studies on transmission of tuberculosis. However, intensive epidemiological investigation may fail to confirm transmission links between patients clustered by IS6110-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) typing. We applied typing based on variable numbers of tandem repeats (VNTRs) of mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units (MIRUs) to isolates from 125 patients in 42 IS6110 clusters, for which thorough epidemiological data were available, to investigate the potential of this method in distinguishing epidemiologically linked from nonlinked patients. Of seven IS6110 clusters without epidemiological links, five were split by MIRU-VNTR typing, while nearly all IS6110 clusters with proven or likely links displayed conserved MIRU-VNTR types. These results provide molecular evidence that not all clusters determined on the basis of multibanded IS6110 RFLP patterns necessarily reflect transmission of tuberculosis. They support the use of MIRU-VNTR typing as a more reliable and faster method for transmission analysis.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Tuberculosis Control, Municipal Health Service, P.O. Box 2200, CE Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Phone: 31 20 5555240. Fax: 31 20 5555350. E-mail: hvdeutekom{at}gggd.amsterdam.nl.

{dagger} H.V.D. and P.S. contributed equally to the work.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 2005, p. 4473-4479, Vol. 43, No. 9
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/JCM.43.9.4473-4479.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.




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