Community transmission of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is associated with activity space overlap in Lima, Peru

  • David Bui (Creator)
  • Shruthi S. Chandran (Contributor)
  • Eyal Oren (San Diego State University) (Creator)
  • Heidi E Brown (Creator)
  • Robin B Harris (Creator)
  • Gwenan M. Knight (Contributor)
  • Louis Grandjean (Creator)
  • Eyal Oren (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Abstract Background Transmission of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDRTB) requires spatial proximity between infectious cases and susceptible persons. We assess activity space overlap among MDRTB cases and community controls to identify potential areas of transmission. Methods We enrolled 35 MDRTB cases and 64 TB-free community controls in Lima, Peru. Cases were whole genome sequenced and strain clustering was used as a proxy for transmission. GPS data were gathered from participants over seven days. Kernel density estimation methods were used to construct activity spaces from GPS locations and the utilization distribution overlap index (UDOI) was used to quantify activity space overlap. Results Activity spaces of controls (median = 35.6 km2, IQR = 25.1–54) were larger than cases (median = 21.3 km2, IQR = 17.9–48.6) (P = 0.02). Activity space overlap was greatest among genetically clustered cases (mean UDOI = 0.63, sd = 0.67) and lowest between cases and controls (mean UDOI = 0.13, sd = 0.28). UDOI was positively associated with genetic similarity of MDRTB strains between case pairs (P
Date made available2021
Publisherfigshare

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