Epidemiology and Drug Resistance Patterns of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in High-Burden Area in Western Siberia, Russia

Author:

Kostyukova Irina1,Pasechnik Oksana2ORCID,Mokrousov Igor34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bacteriology Laboratory, Clinical Anti-Tuberculosis Dispensary, Omsk 644058, Russia

2. Department of Public Health, Omsk State Medical University, Omsk 644050, Russia

3. Laboratory of Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics, St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute, St. Petersburg 197101, Russia

4. Henan International Joint Laboratory of Children’s Infectious Diseases, Children’s Hospital Affiliated to Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou 450018, China

Abstract

Russia is a high-burden area for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Here, we studied the epidemiological situation and drug resistance patterns of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the Omsk region in Western Siberia. M. tuberculosis isolates (n = 851) were recovered from newly diagnosed TB patients in 2021. The isolates were tested by bacteriological and molecular methods, and long-term epidemiological data were analyzed. The TB incidence dec, this is not variablereased from 93.9 in 2012 to 48.1 in 2021, per 100,000 population, but the primary MDR-TB rate increased from 19.2% to 26.4%. The destructive forms of tuberculosis accounted for 37.8% of all cases, while 35.5% of patients were smear-positive. Of all isolates tested, 55.2% were culture-positive, of which 94.5% were further tested for phenotypic drug resistance and associated mutations. More than half (53.4%) of isolates were drug-resistant, 13.9% were monoresistant and 67.9% were MDR. Among MDR isolates, 40.4% were pre-XDR, and 19.2% were XDR. The spectrum of drug resistance included second-line drugs (new-generation fluoroquinolones, linezolid), which significantly increase the risk of an adverse outcome in patients. In conclusion, our results highlight the critical importance of monitoring drug resistance in circulating M. tuberculosis strains emerging due to ineffective treatment and active transmission.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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