2022-08-08Zeitschriftenartikel
Molecular Epidemiology of Mycobacterium abscessus Isolates Recovered from German Cystic Fibrosis Patients
Wetzstein, Nils
Diricks, Margo
Kohl, Thomas A.
Wichelhaus, Thomas A.
Andres, Sönke
Paulowski, Laura
Schwarz, Carsten
Lewin, Astrid
Kehrmann, Jan
Kahl, Barbara C.
Dichtl, Karl
Hügel, Christian
Eickmeier, Olaf
Smaczny, Christina
Schmidt, Annika
Zimmermann, Stefan
Nährlich, Lutz
Hafkemeyer, Sylvia
Niemann, Stefan
Maurer, Florian P.
Hogardt, Michael
Infections due to Mycobacterium abscessus are a major cause of mortality and morbidity in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. Furthermore, M. abscessus has been suspected to be involved in person-to-person transmissions. In 2016, dominant global clonal complexes (DCCs) that occur worldwide among CF patients have been described. To elucidate the epidemiological situation of M. abscessus among CF patients in Germany and to put these data into a global context, we performed whole-genome sequencing of a set of 154 M. abscessus isolates from 123 German patients treated in 14 CF centers. We used MTBseq pipeline to identify clusters of closely related isolates and correlate those with global findings. Genotypic drug susceptibility for macrolides and aminoglycosides was assessed by characterization of the erm(41), rrl, and rrs genes. By this approach, we could identify representatives of all major DCCs (Absc 1, Absc 2, and Mass 1) in our cohort. Intrapersonal isolates showed higher genetic relatedness than interpersonal isolates (median 3 SNPs versus 16 SNPs; P < 0.001). We further identified four clusters with German patients from same centers clustering with less than 25 SNPs distance (range 3 to 18 SNPs) but did not find any hint for in-hospital person-to-person transmission. This is the largest study investigating phylogenetic relations of M. abscessus isolates in Germany. We identified representatives of all reported DCCs but evidence for nosocomial transmission remained inconclusive. Thus, the occurrence of genetically closely related isolates of M. abscessus has to be interpreted with care, as a direct interhuman transmission cannot be directly deduced.
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