Title: Tuberculosis: When two genomes go to war
1TuberculosisWhen two genomes go to war
- Marcel A. Behr
- McGill University
- marcel.behr_at_mcgill.ca
- www.molepi.mcgill.ca
2Overview
- Introduction
- Basic pathogenesis of TB
- Global TB epidemiology
- Molecular epidemiologic methods and lessons from
molepi study - Genetic approaches
- Lessons from host genetics
- Concluding thoughts on TB and other diseases
3Human tuberculosis Natural History
Infection
Initial containment 95
Early Progression - 5 Fast TB
4Tuberculosis Transmission and Natural History
Self-Cure 90
Infection
Initial containment 95
Early Progression - 5 Fast TB
Late Progression - 5 Reactivation TB
5Clinical Manifestations of TB
- General
- fever, weight loss, weakness, consumption
- result from inflammatory response
- Organ specific
- pneumonia cough, sputum /- blood
- scrofula swollen lymph nodes
- genitourinary sterile pyuria
- bone back pain, fracture, hump-back
- meningitis headache, obtundation
- miliary TB no obvious source
6Overview of TB pathogenesis
90 no sequellae
WHY?
Primary infection (tuberculin positive)
5 primary TB (within 2 years)
GET IN
5 reactivation (later in life)
GET OUT
STAY IN
7TB pathogenesis two genomes do battle
M. tuberculosis
H. sapiens
Virulent vs. attenuated
Susceptible vs. resistant
10
90
TB infection (2 billion people)
Active TB 2-3 million deaths / year tie for
first with HIV/AIDS
8TB pathogenesis three genomes do battle
M. tuberculosis
H. sapiens
Virulent vs. attenuated
Susceptible vs. resistant
40
60
TB infection (2 billion people)
Active TB (2-3 million deaths / year)
HIV
9TB and AIDS Epidemiology
- Infection rates often high to both
- Most notably sub-Saharan Africa, South-East Asia
- M. tuberculosis accelerates progression of HIV to
AIDS - TB cause of death in about 25 AIDS
- HIV infection is single strongest risk factor for
progression of TB infection to TB disease - Evil synergy where resources most limited
10Tuberculosis Global epidemiology
Infected 2 billion
Cases 20 million New cases 8 million per
year Deaths 2 million per year
11(No Transcript)
12Role of interventions
INH
BCG
13DNA fingerprinting of M. tuberculosisIS6110-based
RFLP
- 1. Chromosomal DNA
- restriction site
- IS6110 site
- 2. DNA digested using PvuII
-
- 3. Fragments separated by gel electrophoresis
- 4. Agarose blotted onto nitrocellulose and
hybridization performed with labelled IS6110
14RFLP patterns
- If random, gt 250 patterns
- Not random, therefore need to empirically
determine there is sufficient background
diversity - Diversity a function of
- Bacteria under study
- Genetic clock of marker
- Local epidemiology
15Planes of molepi study
Individual Clinician
Defined outbreak Disease Control
Population Epidemiologist
16Treatment failureRelapse vs. reinfection?
- Relapse a therapeutic failure
- Change treatment approach
- End point in clinical trials
- Reinfection a TB control failure
- Do source investigation
- Implications for immunity
- Can you be dually infected?
- Does infection provide protection against
superinfection?
17Treatment failures with MDR-TB
Relapses have original strain
Reinfections - house strain
Small et al., NEJM, 1993
18Systematic studies of reinfection
- Highly variable results
- Depend on local epi
- Capetown 75 failures are reinfections
- Van Rie, NEJM, 1999
- Canary Island 44
- Caminero, Am J Resp CCM, 2001
- Netherlands, SF extremely rare
- Dual infection 1 case in 6 years, SF
- Yeh et al, IJTLD, 1999
19Molepi within suspected outbreak
- Often markers used to confirm outbreak
- Defined setting provides validation
- May only provide concordant data
- No value added
- May provide confirmation with extra information
20AIDS-related TB outbreak Epi curve
- Hospice, 1990, S.F.
- 14 cases of TB in 10 months suspected outbreak
- Unusual time course