Novel approaches for the diagnosis of drug-resistance, treatment response, and infectiousness in patients with tuberculosis (the eDIToR study – Diagnosis Infectiousness and Treatment Response)

Date
2020-03
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
Abstract
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Drug-resistance tuberculosis (DR-TB) is a major challenge facing TB control. Limiting personto-person transmission is key. This can be done by reducing time to drug susceptibility diagnosis and effective treatment initiation, which reduces infectiousness. Furthermore, DRTB patients have suboptimal outcomes even on effective treatment and we have few methods for monitoring treatment response. If patients are not responding to treatment, better methods are required to measure infectiousness so that transmission may be limited. First, to alleviate the under-diagnosis of drug-resistance stemming from additional sputa not submitted for drug susceptibility testing (DST) and infrastructural barriers, we showed that cartridge extract (CE) from used TB-positive Xpert MTB/RIF (Xpert) tests is directly usable for MTBDRsl (a second-line molecular DST). Furthermore, we showed that CE was useful for spoligotyping for molecular epidemiology. Second, we showed that this CE approach is feasible on Xpert MTB/RIF Ultra (Ultra), which is Xpert’s successor. We also evaluated the risk of rpoB amplicon escape during the extraction and the usefulness of material in other cartridge chambers for different molecular tests. In short, cross-contamination was possible but appears extremely unlikely. Only the diamond cartridge compartment contains useful material. Third, MTBDRsl itself has limitations. For example, it only measures susceptibility to two drug classes. We assessed the feasibility of ultra-deep sequencing (single molecule overlapping reads, SMOR) on CE. SMOR had more actionable results (useful for clinical decision making) on Xpert CE than Ultra CE, and detected micro-heteroresistance missed by conventional DST. Next, to evaluate the utility of new tools for treatment response, we leveraged a MDR-TB drug trial (NeXT, Clinicaltrials.gov #NCT02454205) to collect serial sputa. We assessed if sputa contained differentially culturable tubercle bacilli (DCTB) with a dormancy-associated.
Description
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2020.
Keywords
Tuberculosis, Drug resistance -- Tuberculosis, Infectious diseases, Treatment monitoring, Clinical research, Multidrug resistance -- Diagnosis
Citation