The Burden of Extensively Drug Resistant and Pre-Extensively Drug Resistant Tuberculosis among Multidrug-Resistant Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Patients in Ghana.
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University of Ghana
Abstract
Background
The majority of people around the world are at risk because of the rise of extensively drug
resistant (XDR) and pre-extensively drug-resistant (Pre-XDR) tuberculosis (TB), especially in
developing countries like Ghana. Extensively Drug Resistant Tuberculosis, a considerably
more difficult-to-treat type of MDR tuberculosis, had been reported in at least 46 countries as
of February 2008. By 2017, 77 countries had reported 11 000 infections of XDR-TB with a
treatment success rate of only 34%. In Ghana, the first case of XDR-TB was published in 2018.
However, there is insufficient information on the prevalence of XDR-TB, pre-XDR-TB, and
their associated resistant mutations in Ghana. The study sought to provide a baseline data on
the burden of pre-XDR-TB and XDR-TB in Ghana. It also determined the mutations
responsible for pre-XDR/ XDR-TB, for clinical and programmatic management of pre-XDR/
XDR-TB in Ghana.
Aim of Study: The main aim of the study was to determine the proportion of extensively and
pre-extensively Drug Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis among multidrug-resistant M.
tuberculosis complex patients in Ghana
Methods: One hundred and seventy-one (171) archived clinical isolates of MDR-TB collected
from patients across Ghana between, January 2016 to December, 2020 were retrieved. The
isolates were retested to confirm their phenotypic and genotypic drug susceptibility to the first-
and second-line anti-TB drugs using the BACTEC MGIT system and MTBDRplus 96,
MTBDRsl 96-line probe assays respectively
Results: Of the 171 archival isolates collected, most of the isolates came from 7 regions,
Eastern region having the highest (39.5%) followed by Greater Accra (19.8%). Majority of the
samples were from males (78.9%). Of the 171 archival isolates collected, 81 (47.4%) were confirmed to be MDR, 6 (7.4%) were Pre-XDR-TB and no XDR-TB was detected. The katG
S315T1 (73.3%) and rpoB S531L (42.5%) were the common mutations observed among
isoniazid and rifampicin resistant isolates respectively. Majority of the mutations and amino
acid changes that caused pre-XDR-TB were gyrAWT3+gyrAMUT3A and gyrAMUT3A (D94A)
(50.0%) for fluoroquinolone and (rrsWT1) C1402T (50.0%) for aminoglycosides. The other
detected mutations with their amino acid changes were gyrA MUT1 (A90V), gyrAWT3+gyrA
MUT3C (D94G) and gyrA MUT2 (S91P) (16.7%) each for fluoroquinolones and rrWT2
(position 1484) (33.3%) and rrs MUT2 (G1484T) (16.7%) for the aminoglycosides.
Conclusion: Pre-XDR-TB prevalence was marginally higher amongst MDR-TB patients in
Ghana and no XDR-TB was detected. Nonetheless, a sustained surveillance of pre-XDR-TB
and XDR-TB is advocated. The most common flouroquinolone mutation associated with pre
XDR-TB was D94A
Description
MPhil. Medical Microbiology