Emergence and spread of a human-transmissible multidrug-resistant nontuberculous mycobacterium.
Authors
Bryant, Josephine MGrogono, Dorothy M
Rodriguez-Rincon, Daniela
Everall, Isobel
Brown, Karen P
Moreno, Pablo
Verma, Deepshikha
Hill, Emily
Drijkoningen, Judith
Gilligan, Peter
Esther, Charles R
Noone, Peadar G
Giddings, Olivia
Bell, Scott C
Thomson, Rachel
Wainwright, Claire E
Coulter, Chris
Pandey, Sushil
Wood, Michelle E
Stockwell, Rebecca E
Ramsay, Kay A
Sherrard, Laura J
Kidd, Timothy J
Jabbour, Nassib
Johnson, Graham R
Knibbs, Luke D
Morawska, Lidia
Sly, Peter D
Jones, Andrew
Bilton, Diana
Laurenson, Ian
Ruddy, Michael
Bourke, Stephen
Bowler, Ian Cjw
Chapman, Stephen J
Clayton, Andrew
Cullen, Mairi
Daniels, Thomas
Dempsey, Owen
Denton, Miles
Desai, Maya
Drew, Richard J
Edenborough, Frank
Evans, Jason
Folb, Jonathan
Humphrey, Helen
Isalska, Barbara
Jensen-Fangel, Søren
Jönsson, Bodil
Jones, Andrew M
Katzenstein, Terese L
Lillebaek, Troels
MacGregor, Gordon
Mayell, Sarah
Millar, Michael
Modha, Deborah
Nash, Edward F
O'Brien, Christopher
O'Brien, Deirdre
Ohri, Chandra
Pao, Caroline S
Peckham, Daniel
Perrin, Felicity
Perry, Audrey
Pressler, Tania
Prtak, Laura
Qvist, Tavs
Robb, Ali
Rodgers, Helen
Schaffer, Kirsten
Shafi, Nadia
van Ingen, Jakko
Walshaw, Martin
Watson, Danie
West, Noreen
Whitehouse, Joanna
Haworth, Charles S
Harris, Simon R
Ordway, Diane
Parkhill, Julian
Floto, R Andres
Issue Date
2016-11-11Keywords
RESPIRATORY DISORDERSCYSTIC FIBROSIS
INFECTION CONTROL
MICROBIOLOGY
Metadata
Show full item recordDOI
10.1126/science.aaf8156PubMed ID
27846606Additional Links
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5142603/Abstract
Lung infections with Mycobacterium abscessus, a species of multidrug resistant nontuberculous mycobacteria, are emerging as an important global threat to individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF) where they accelerate inflammatory lung damage leading to increased morbidity and mortality. Previously, M. abscessus was thought to be independently acquired by susceptible individuals from the environment. However, using whole genome analysis of a global collection of clinical isolates, we show that the majority of M. abscessus infections are acquired through transmission, potentially via fomites and aerosols, of recently emerged dominant circulating clones that have spread globally. We demonstrate that these clones are associated with worse clinical outcomes, show increased virulence in cell-based and mouse infection models, and thus represent an urgent international infection challenge.Language
enISSN
1095-9203ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1126/science.aaf8156
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