[HTML][HTML] A quantitative evaluation of MIRU-VNTR typing against whole-genome sequencing for identifying Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission: a prospective …

DH Wyllie, JA Davidson, EG Smith, P Rathod… - …, 2018 - thelancet.com
DH Wyllie, JA Davidson, EG Smith, P Rathod, DW Crook, TEA Peto, E Robinson, T Walker
EBioMedicine, 2018thelancet.com
Abstract Background Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Unit-Variable Number Tandem
Repeat (MIRU-VNTR) typing is widely used in high-income countries to determine
Mycobacterium tuberculosis relatedness. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is known to
deliver greater specificity, but no quantitative prospective comparison has yet been
undertaken. Methods We studied isolates from the English Midlands, sampled consecutively
between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2015. In addition to routinely performed MIRU …
Background
Mycobacterial Interspersed Repetitive Unit-Variable Number Tandem Repeat (MIRU-VNTR) typing is widely used in high-income countries to determine Mycobacterium tuberculosis relatedness. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is known to deliver greater specificity, but no quantitative prospective comparison has yet been undertaken.
Methods
We studied isolates from the English Midlands, sampled consecutively between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2015. In addition to routinely performed MIRU-VNTR typing, DNA was extracted from liquid cultures and sequenced using Illumina technology. Demographic and epidemiological data for the relevant patients were extracted from the Enhanced Tuberculosis Surveillance system run by Public Health England. Closely related samples, defined using a threshold of five single nucleotide variants (SNVs), were compared to samples with identical MIRU-VNTR profiles, to samples from individuals with shared epidemiological risk factors, and to those with both characteristics.
Findings
1999 patients were identified for whom at least one M. tuberculosis isolate had been MIRU-VNTR typed and sequenced. Comparing epidemiological risk factors with close genetic relatedness, only co-residence had a positive predictive value of over 5%. Excluding co-resident individuals, 18.6% of patients with identical MIRU-VNTR profiles were within 5 SNVs. Where patients also shared social risk factors and ethnic group, this rose to 48%. Only 8% of MIRU-VNTR linked pairs in lineage 1 were within 5 SNV, compared to 31% in lineage 4.
Interpretation
In the setting studied, this molecular epidemiological study shows MIRU-VNTR typing and epidemiological risk factors are poorly predictive of close genomic relatedness, assessed by SNV. MIRU-VNTR performance varies markedly by lineage.
Funding
Public Health England, Health Innovation Challenge Fund, NIHR Health Protection Research Unit Oxford, NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre.
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