Last data update: Aug 15, 2025. (Total: 49733 publications since 2009)
| Records 1-14 (of 14 Records) |
| Query Trace: Smith AM[original query] |
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| Global diversity and antimicrobial resistance of typhoid fever pathogens: Insights from a meta-analysis of 13,000 Salmonella Typhi genomes
Carey ME , Dyson ZA , Ingle DJ , Amir A , Aworh MK , Chattaway MA , Chew KL , Crump JA , Feasey NA , Howden BP , Keddy KH , Maes M , Parry CM , Van Puyvelde S , Webb HE , Afolayan AO , Alexander AP , Anandan S , Andrews JR , Ashton PM , Basnyat B , Bavdekar A , Bogoch II , Clemens JD , da Silva KE , De A , de Ligt J , Diaz Guevara PL , Dolecek C , Dutta S , Ehlers MM , Francois Watkins L , Garrett DO , Godbole G , Gordon MA , Greenhill AR , Griffin C , Gupta M , Hendriksen RS , Heyderman RS , Hooda Y , Hormazabal JC , Ikhimiukor OO , Iqbal J , Jacob JJ , Jenkins C , Jinka DR , John J , Kang G , Kanteh A , Kapil A , Karkey A , Kariuki S , Kingsley RA , Koshy RM , Lauer AC , Levine MM , Lingegowda RK , Luby SP , Mackenzie GA , Mashe T , Msefula C , Mutreja A , Nagaraj G , Nagaraj S , Nair S , Naseri TK , Nimarota-Brown S , Njamkepo E , Okeke IN , Perumal SPB , Pollard AJ , Pragasam AK , Qadri F , Qamar FN , Rahman SIA , Rambocus SD , Rasko DA , Ray P , Robins-Browne R , Rongsen-Chandola T , Rutanga JP , Saha SK , Saha S , Saigal K , Sajib MSI , Seidman JC , Shakya J , Shamanna V , Shastri J , Shrestha R , Sia S , Sikorski MJ , Singh A , Smith AM , Tagg KA , Tamrakar D , Tanmoy AM , Thomas M , Thomas MS , Thomsen R , Thomson NR , Tupua S , Vaidya K , Valcanis M , Veeraraghavan B , Weill FX , Wright J , Dougan G , Argimón S , Keane JA , Aanensen DM , Baker S , Holt KE . Elife 2023 12
BACKGROUND: The Global Typhoid Genomics Consortium was established to bring together the typhoid research community to aggregate and analyse Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (Typhi) genomic data to inform public health action. This analysis, which marks 22 years since the publication of the first Typhi genome, represents the largest Typhi genome sequence collection to date (n=13,000). METHODS: This is a meta-analysis of global genotype and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) determinants extracted from previously sequenced genome data and analysed using consistent methods implemented in open analysis platforms GenoTyphi and Pathogenwatch. RESULTS: Compared with previous global snapshots, the data highlight that genotype 4.3.1 (H58) has not spread beyond Asia and Eastern/Southern Africa; in other regions, distinct genotypes dominate and have independently evolved AMR. Data gaps remain in many parts of the world, and we show the potential of travel-associated sequences to provide informal 'sentinel' surveillance for such locations. The data indicate that ciprofloxacin non-susceptibility (>1 resistance determinant) is widespread across geographies and genotypes, with high-level ciprofloxacin resistance (≥3 determinants) reaching 20% prevalence in South Asia. Extensively drug-resistant (XDR) typhoid has become dominant in Pakistan (70% in 2020) but has not yet become established elsewhere. Ceftriaxone resistance has emerged in eight non-XDR genotypes, including a ciprofloxacin-resistant lineage (4.3.1.2.1) in India. Azithromycin resistance mutations were detected at low prevalence in South Asia, including in two common ciprofloxacin-resistant genotypes. CONCLUSIONS: The consortium's aim is to encourage continued data sharing and collaboration to monitor the emergence and global spread of AMR Typhi, and to inform decision-making around the introduction of typhoid conjugate vaccines (TCVs) and other prevention and control strategies. FUNDING: No specific funding was awarded for this meta-analysis. Coordinators were supported by fellowships from the European Union (ZAD received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 845681), the Wellcome Trust (SB, Wellcome Trust Senior Fellowship), and the National Health and Medical Research Council (DJI is supported by an NHMRC Investigator Grant [GNT1195210]). | Salmonella Typhi (Typhi) is a type of bacteria that causes typhoid fever. More than 110,000 people die from this disease each year, predominantly in areas of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia with limited access to safe water and sanitation. Clinicians use antibiotics to treat typhoid fever, but scientists worry that the spread of antimicrobial-resistant Typhi could render the drugs ineffective, leading to increased typhoid fever mortality. The World Health Organization has prequalified two vaccines that are highly effective in preventing typhoid fever and may also help limit the emergence and spread of resistant Typhi. In low resource settings, public health officials must make difficult trade-off decisions about which new vaccines to introduce into already crowded immunization schedules. Understanding the local burden of antimicrobial-resistant Typhi and how it is spreading could help inform their actions. The Global Typhoid Genomics Consortium analyzed 13,000 Typhi genomes from 110 countries to provide a global overview of genetic diversity and antimicrobial-resistant patterns. The analysis showed great genetic diversity of the different strains between countries and regions. For example, the H58 Typhi variant, which is often drug-resistant, has spread rapidly through Asia and Eastern and Southern Africa, but is less common in other regions. However, distinct strains of other drug-resistant Typhi have emerged in other parts of the world. Resistance to the antibiotic ciprofloxacin was widespread and accounted for over 85% of cases in South Africa. Around 70% of Typhi from Pakistan were extensively drug-resistant in 2020, but these hard-to-treat variants have not yet become established elsewhere. Variants that are resistant to both ciprofloxacin and ceftriaxone have been identified, and azithromycin resistance has also appeared in several different variants across South Asia. The Consortium’s analyses provide valuable insights into the global distribution and transmission patterns of drug-resistant Typhi. Limited genetic data were available fromseveral regions, but data from travel-associated cases helped fill some regional gaps. These findings may help serve as a starting point for collective sharing and analyses of genetic data to inform local public health action. Funders need to provide ongoing supportto help fill global surveillance data gaps. | eng |
| Imported cholera cases, South Africa, 2023
Smith AM , Sekwadi P , Erasmus LK , Lee CC , Stroika SG , Ndzabandzaba S , Alex V , Nel J , Njamkepo E , Thomas J , Weill FX . Emerg Infect Dis 2023 29 (8) 1687-1690 Since February 2022, Malawi has experienced a cholera outbreak of >54,000 cases. We investigated 6 cases in South Africa and found that isolates linked to the outbreak were Vibrio cholerae O1 serotype Ogawa from seventh pandemic El Tor sublineage AFR15, indicating a new introduction of cholera into Africa from south Asia. |
| PulseNet International Survey on the Implementation of Whole Genome Sequencing in Low and Middle-Income Countries for Foodborne Disease Surveillance.
Davedow T , Carleton H , Kubota K , Palm D , Schroeder M , Gerner-Smidt P , Al-Jardani A , Chinen I , Kam KM , Smith AM , Nadon C . Foodborne Pathog Dis 2022 19 (5) 332-340
PulseNet International (PNI) is a global network of 88 countries who work together through their regional and national public health laboratories to track foodborne disease around the world. The vision of PNI is to implement globally standardized surveillance using whole genome sequencing (WGS) for real-time identification and subtyping of foodborne pathogens to strengthen preparedness and response and lower the burden of disease. Several countries in North America and Europe have experienced significant benefits in disease mitigation after implementing WGS. To broaden the routine use of WGS around the world, challenges and barriers must be overcome. We conducted this study to determine the challenges and barriers countries are encountering in their attempts to implement WGS and to identify how PNI can provide support to improve and become a better integrated system overall. A survey was designed with a set of qualitative questions to capture the status, challenges, barriers, and successes of countries in the implementation of WGS and was administered to laboratories in Africa, Asia-Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Middle East. One-third of respondents do not use WGS, and only 8% reported using WGS for routine, real-time surveillance. The main barriers for implementation of WGS were lack of funding, gaps in expertise, and training, especially for data analysis and interpretation. Features of an ideal system to facilitate implementation and global surveillance were identified as an all-in-one software that is free, accessible, standardized and validated. This survey highlights the minimal use of WGS for foodborne disease surveillance outside the United States, Canada, and Europe to date. Although funding remains a major barrier to WGS-based surveillance, critical gaps in expertise and availability of tools must be overcome. Opportunities to seek sustainable funding, provide training, and identify solutions for a globally standardized surveillance platform will accelerate implementation of WGS worldwide. |
| Outbreak of Listeriosis in South Africa Associated with Processed Meat.
Thomas J , Govender N , McCarthy KM , Erasmus LK , Doyle TJ , Allam M , Ismail A , Ramalwa N , Sekwadi P , Ntshoe G , Shonhiwa A , Essel V , Tau N , Smouse S , Ngomane HM , Disenyeng B , Page NA , Govender NP , Duse AG , Stewart R , Thomas T , Mahoney D , Tourdjman M , Disson O , Thouvenot P , Maury MM , Leclercq A , Lecuit M , Smith AM , Blumberg LH . N Engl J Med 2020 382 (7) 632-643
BACKGROUND: An outbreak of listeriosis was identified in South Africa in 2017. The source was unknown. METHODS: We conducted epidemiologic, trace-back, and environmental investigations and used whole-genome sequencing to type Listeria monocytogenes isolates. A case was defined as laboratory-confirmed L. monocytogenes infection during the period from June 11, 2017, to April 7, 2018. RESULTS: A total of 937 cases were identified, of which 465 (50%) were associated with pregnancy; 406 of the pregnancy-associated cases (87%) occurred in neonates. Of the 937 cases, 229 (24%) occurred in patients 15 to 49 years of age (excluding those who were pregnant). Among the patients in whom human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) status was known, 38% of those with pregnancy-associated cases (77 of 204) and 46% of the remaining patients (97 of 211) were infected with HIV. Among 728 patients with a known outcome, 193 (27%) died. Clinical isolates from 609 patients were sequenced, and 567 (93%) were identified as sequence type 6 (ST6). In a case-control analysis, patients with ST6 infections were more likely to have eaten polony (a ready-to-eat processed meat) than those with non-ST6 infections (odds ratio, 8.55; 95% confidence interval, 1.66 to 43.35). Polony and environmental samples also yielded ST6 isolates, which, together with the isolates from the patients, belonged to the same core-genome multilocus sequence typing cluster with no more than 4 allelic differences; these findings showed that polony produced at a single facility was the outbreak source. A recall of ready-to-eat processed meat products from this facility was associated with a rapid decline in the incidence of L. monocytogenes ST6 infections. CONCLUSIONS: This investigation showed that in a middle-income country with a high prevalence of HIV infection, L. monocytogenes caused disproportionate illness among pregnant girls and women and HIV-infected persons. Whole-genome sequencing facilitated the detection of the outbreak and guided the trace-back investigations that led to the identification of the source. |
| PulseNet International: Vision for the implementation of whole genome sequencing (WGS) for global food-borne disease surveillance.
Nadon C , Van Walle I , Gerner-Smidt P , Campos J , Chinen I , Concepcion-Acevedo J , Gilpin B , Smith AM , Man Kam K , Perez E , Trees E , Kubota K , Takkinen J , Nielsen EM , Carleton H . Euro Surveill 2017 22 (23)
PulseNet International is a global network dedicated to laboratory-based surveillance for food-borne diseases. The network comprises the national and regional laboratory networks of Africa, Asia Pacific, Canada, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East, and the United States. The PulseNet International vision is the standardised use of whole genome sequencing (WGS) to identify and subtype food-borne bacterial pathogens worldwide, replacing traditional methods to strengthen preparedness and response, reduce global social and economic disease burden, and save lives. To meet the needs of real-time surveillance, the PulseNet International network will standardise subtyping via WGS using whole genome multilocus sequence typing (wgMLST), which delivers sufficiently high resolution and epidemiological concordance, plus unambiguous nomenclature for the purposes of surveillance. Standardised protocols, validation studies, quality control programmes, database and nomenclature development, and training should support the implementation and decentralisation of WGS. Ideally, WGS data collected for surveillance purposes should be publicly available, in real time where possible, respecting data protection policies. WGS data are suitable for surveillance and outbreak purposes and for answering scientific questions pertaining to source attribution, antimicrobial resistance, transmission patterns, and virulence, which will further enable the protection and improvement of public health with respect to food-borne disease. |
| Typhoid fever in South Africa in an endemic HIV setting
Keddy KH , Sooka A , Smith AM , Musekiwa A , Tau NP , Klugman KP , Angulo FJ . PLoS One 2016 11 (10) e0164939 BACKGROUND: Typhoid fever remains an important disease in Africa, associated with outbreaks and the emerging multidrug resistant Salmonella enterica serotype Typhi (Salmonella Typhi) haplotype, H58. This study describes the incidence of, and factors associated with mortality due to, typhoid fever in South Africa, where HIV prevalence is high. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Nationwide active laboratory-based surveillance for culture-confirmed typhoid fever was undertaken from 2003-2013. At selected institutions, additional clinical data from patients were collected including age, sex, HIV status, disease severity and outcome. HIV prevalence among typhoid fever patients was compared to national HIV seroprevalence estimates. The national reference laboratory tested Salmonella Typhi isolates for antimicrobial susceptibility and haplotype. Unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression analyses were conducted determining factors associated with typhoid fever mortality. We identified 855 typhoid fever cases: annual incidence ranged from 0.11 to 0.39 per 100,000 population. Additional clinical data were available for 369 (46.8%) cases presenting to the selected sites. Among typhoid fever patients with known HIV status, 19.3% (29/150) were HIV-infected. In adult females, HIV prevalence in typhoid fever patients was 43.2% (19/44) versus 15.7% national HIV seroprevalence (P < .001); in adult males, 16.3% (7/43) versus 12.3% national HIV seroprevalence (P = .2). H58 represented 11.9% (22/185) of Salmonella Typhi isolates tested. Increased mortality was associated with HIV infection (AOR 10.7; 95% CI 2.3-50.3) and disease severity (AOR 9.8; 95% CI 1.6-60.0) on multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: Typhoid fever incidence in South Africa was largely unchanged from 2003-2013. Typhoid fever mortality was associated disease severity. HIV infection may be a contributing factor. Interventions mandate improved health care access, including to HIV management programmes as well as patient education. Further studies are necessary to clarify relationships between HIV infection and typhoid fever in adults. |
| Molecular Surveillance Identifies Multiple Transmissions of Typhoid in West Africa.
Wong VK , Holt KE , Okoro C , Baker S , Pickard DJ , Marks F , Page AJ , Olanipekun G , Munir H , Alter R , Fey PD , Feasey NA , Weill FX , Le Hello S , Hart PJ , Kariuki S , Breiman RF , Gordon MA , Heyderman RS , Jacobs J , Lunguya O , Msefula C , MacLennan CA , Keddy KH , Smith AM , Onsare RS , De Pinna E , Nair S , Amos B , Dougan G , Obaro S . PLoS Negl Trop Dis 2016 10 (9) e0004781
BACKGROUND: The burden of typhoid in sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries has been difficult to estimate, in part, due to suboptimal laboratory diagnostics. However, surveillance blood cultures at two sites in Nigeria have identified typhoid associated with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (S. Typhi) as an important cause of bacteremia in children. METHODS: A total of 128 S. Typhi isolates from these studies in Nigeria were whole-genome sequenced, and the resulting data was used to place these Nigerian isolates into a worldwide context based on their phylogeny and carriage of molecular determinants of antibiotic resistance. RESULTS: Several distinct S. Typhi genotypes were identified in Nigeria that were related to other clusters of S. Typhi isolates from north, west and central regions of Africa. The rapidly expanding S. Typhi clade 4.3.1 (H58) previously associated with multiple antimicrobial resistances in Asia and in east, central and southern Africa, was not detected in this study. However, antimicrobial resistance was common amongst the Nigerian isolates and was associated with several plasmids, including the IncHI1 plasmid commonly associated with S. Typhi. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that typhoid in Nigeria was established through multiple independent introductions into the country, with evidence of regional spread. MDR typhoid appears to be evolving independently of the haplotype H58 found in other typhoid endemic countries. This study highlights an urgent need for routine surveillance to monitor the epidemiology of typhoid and evolution of antimicrobial resistance within the bacterial population as a means to facilitate public health interventions to reduce the substantial morbidity and mortality of typhoid. |
| United States and territory telemedicine policies: Identifying gaps in perinatal care
Okoroh EM , Kroelinger CD , Smith AM , Goodman DA , Barfield WD . Am J Obstet Gynecol 2016 215 (6) 772 e1-772 e6 BACKGROUND: Perinatal regionalization is a system of maternal and neonatal risk-appropriate health care delivery in which resources are ideally allocated for mothers and newborns during pregnancy, labor and delivery, and postpartum, in order to deliver appropriate care. Typically, perinatal risk-appropriate care is provided in-person, but with the advancement of technologies, the opportunity to provide care remotely has emerged. Telemedicine provides distance-based care to patients by consultation, diagnosis, and treatment in rural or remote US jurisdictions (states and territories). OBJECTIVES: Summarize states and territories telemedicine policies and assess if maternal and neonatal risk-appropriate care is specified. STUDY DESIGN: A 2014 systematic web-based review of publicly available rules, statutes, regulations, laws, planning documents, and program descriptions among US jurisdictions (N = 59) on telemedicine care. Policies including language on the topics of consultation, diagnosis, or treatment, and those specific to maternal and neonatal risk-appropriate care were categorized for analysis. RESULTS: Overall, 36 jurisdictions (32 states, 3 territories, and Washington DC) (61%) had telemedicine policies with language referencing consultation, diagnosis, or treatment; 29 (49%) referenced consultation, 30 (51%) referenced diagnosis, and 35 (59%) referenced treatment. Twenty-six jurisdictions (22 states, 3 territories, and Washington DC) (44%), referenced all topics. Only three jurisdictions (5%), all states, had policy language specifically addressing perinatal care. CONCLUSIONS: The majority of states have published telemedicine policies, but few specify policy language for perinatal risk-appropriate care. By ensuring that language specific to the perinatal population is included in telemedicine policies, access to maternal and neonatal care can be increased in rural, remote, and resource challenged jurisdictions. |
| Distinct Salmonella Enteritidis lineages associated with enterocolitis in high-income settings and invasive disease in low-income settings.
Feasey NA , Hadfield J , Keddy KH , Dallman TJ , Jacobs J , Deng X , Wigley P , Barquist Barquist L , Langridge GC , Feltwell T , Harris SR , Mather AE , Fookes M , Aslett M , Msefula C , Kariuki S , Maclennan CA , Onsare RS , Weill FX , Le Hello S , Smith AM , McClelland M , Desai P , Parry CM , Cheesbrough J , French N , Campos J , Chabalgoity JA , Betancor L , Hopkins KL , Nair S , Humphrey TJ , Lunguya O , Cogan TA , Tapia MD , Sow SO , Tennant SM , Bornstein K , Levine MM , Lacharme-Lora L , Everett DB , Kingsley RA , Parkhill J , Heyderman RS , Dougan G , Gordon MA , Thomson NR . Nat Genet 2016 48 (10) 1211-1217
An epidemiological paradox surrounds Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis. In high-income settings, it has been responsible for an epidemic of poultry-associated, self-limiting enterocolitis, whereas in sub-Saharan Africa it is a major cause of invasive nontyphoidal Salmonella disease, associated with high case fatality. By whole-genome sequence analysis of 675 isolates of S. Enteritidis from 45 countries, we show the existence of a global epidemic clade and two new clades of S. Enteritidis that are geographically restricted to distinct regions of Africa. The African isolates display genomic degradation, a novel prophage repertoire, and an expanded multidrug resistance plasmid. S. Enteritidis is a further example of a Salmonella serotype that displays niche plasticity, with distinct clades that enable it to become a prominent cause of gastroenteritis in association with the industrial production of eggs and of multidrug-resistant, bloodstream-invasive infection in Africa. |
| Clinical and microbiological features of Salmonella meningitis in a South African population, 2003-2013
Keddy KH , Sooka A , Musekiwa A , Smith AM , Ismail H , Tau NP , Crowther-Gibson P , Angulo FJ , Klugman KP . Clin Infect Dis 2015 61 Suppl 4 S272-82 BACKGROUND: The clinical and microbiological characteristics of nontyphoidal Salmonella (NTS) meningitis in South Africa, where human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevalence is high (approximately 15% in persons ≥15 years of age), were reviewed. METHODS: From 2003 through 2013, 278 cases were identified through national laboratory-based surveillance. Clinical information (age, sex, outcome, Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS], and HIV status) was ascertained at selected sites. Isolates were serotyped; susceptibility testing and multilocus sequence typing on Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium isolates was performed. Multivariable logistic regression was used to determine factors associated with mortality outcome, using Stata software, version 13. RESULTS: Where age was ascertained, 139 of 256 (54.3%) patients were <15 years. Males represented 151 of 267 (56.6%). Mortality outcome was recorded for 112 of 146 (76.7%) enhanced surveillance patients; 53 of 112 (47.3%) died. Death was associated with GCS ≤13 (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 18.7; 95% confidence interval [CI], 3.0-118.5; P = .002) on multivariable analysis. Where data were available, all 45 patients aged >15 years were HIV infected, compared with 24 of 46 (52.2%) patients aged <5 years. Neonates were less likely to be HIV infected than infants aged 2-12 months (OR, 4.8; 95% CI, 1.1-21.1; P = .039).Salmonella Typhimurium represented 106 of 238 (44.5%) serotyped isolates: 65 of 95 (68.4%) were ST313 vs ST19, respectively, and significantly associated with HIV-infected patients (P = .03) and multidrug resistance (OR, 6.6; 95% CI, 2.5-17.2; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: NTS meningitis in South Africa is highly associated with HIV in adults, with neonates (irrespective of HIV status), and with Salmonella Typhimurium ST313. GCS is the best predictor of mortality: early diagnosis and treatment are critical. Focused prevention requires further studies to understand the sources and transmission routes. |
| Phylogeographical analysis of the dominant multidrug-resistant H58 clade of Salmonella Typhi identifies inter- and intracontinental transmission events.
Wong VK , Baker S , Pickard DJ , Parkhill J , Page AJ , Feasey NA , Kingsley RA , Thomson NR , Keane JA , Weill FX , Edwards DJ , Hawkey J , Harris SR , Mather AE , Cain AK , Hadfield J , Hart PJ , Thieu NT , Klemm EJ , Glinos DA , Breiman RF , Watson CH , Kariuki S , Gordon MA , Heyderman RS , Okoro C , Jacobs J , Lunguya O , Edmunds WJ , Msefula C , Chabalgoity JA , Kama M , Jenkins K , Dutta S , Marks F , Campos J , Thompson C , Obaro S , MacLennan CA , Dolecek C , Keddy KH , Smith AM , Parry CM , Karkey A , Mulholland EK , Campbell JI , Dongol S , Basnyat B , Dufour M , Bandaranayake D , Naseri TT , Singh SP , Hatta M , Newton P , Onsare RS , Isaia L , Dance D , Davong V , Thwaites G , Wijedoru L , Crump JA , De Pinna E , Nair S , Nilles EJ , Thanh DP , Turner P , Soeng S , Valcanis M , Powling J , Dimovski K , Hogg G , Farrar J , Holt KE , Dougan G . Nat Genet 2015 47 (6) 632-9
The emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) typhoid is a major global health threat affecting many countries where the disease is endemic. Here whole-genome sequence analysis of 1,832 Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (S. Typhi) identifies a single dominant MDR lineage, H58, that has emerged and spread throughout Asia and Africa over the last 30 years. Our analysis identifies numerous transmissions of H58, including multiple transfers from Asia to Africa and an ongoing, unrecognized MDR epidemic within Africa itself. Notably, our analysis indicates that H58 lineages are displacing antibiotic-sensitive isolates, transforming the global population structure of this pathogen. H58 isolates can harbor a complex MDR element residing either on transmissible IncHI1 plasmids or within multiple chromosomal integration sites. We also identify new mutations that define the H58 lineage. This phylogeographical analysis provides a framework to facilitate global management of MDR typhoid and is applicable to similar MDR lineages emerging in other bacterial species. |
| Comparative genomics of Vibrio cholerae from Haiti, Asia, and Africa.
Reimer AR , Van Domselaar G , Stroika S , Walker M , Kent H , Tarr C , Talkington D , Rowe L , Olsen-Rasmussen M , Frace M , Sammons S , Dahourou GA , Boncy J , Smith AM , Mabon P , Petkau A , Graham M , Gilmour MW , Gerner-Smidt P . Emerg Infect Dis 2011 17 (11) 2113-2121
Cholera was absent from the island of Hispaniola at least a century before an outbreak that began in Haiti in the fall of 2010. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis of clinical isolates from the Haiti outbreak and recent global travelers returning to the United States showed indistinguishable PFGE fingerprints. To better explore the genetic ancestry of the Haiti outbreak strain, we acquired 23 whole-genome Vibrio cholerae sequences: 9 isolates obtained in Haiti or the Dominican Republic, 12 PFGE pattern-matched isolates linked to Asia or Africa, and 2 nonmatched outliers from the Western Hemisphere. Phylogenies for whole-genome sequences and core genome single-nucleotide polymorphisms showed that the Haiti outbreak strain is genetically related to strains originating in India and Cameroon. However, because no identical genetic match was found among sequenced contemporary isolates, a definitive genetic origin for the outbreak in Haiti remains speculative. |
| International collaboration tracks typhoid fever cases over two continents from South Africa to Australia
Smith AM , Keddy KH , Ismail H , Thomas J , van der Gryp R , Manamela MJ , Huma M , Sooka A , Theobald LK , Mennen MA , O'Reilly LC . J Med Microbiol 2011 60 1405-1407 Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (S. Typhi) is the causative agent of typhoid fever. The disease is primarily waterborne or foodborne, but person-to-person spread by direct contact is well recognized. The bacterium is of great clinical importance as humans are the only recognized reservoir of S. Typhi and typhoid fever is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in humans, particularly in developing countries. For the year 2000, it was estimated that, worldwide, typhoid fever caused 21 650 974 illnesses and 216 510 deaths (Crump et al., 2004). In South Africa (SA), some rural areas remain endemic for typhoid fever and these areas are associated with the lack of potable water. The disease has become uncommon in most urbanized areas of the country where safe water supplies are mostly guaranteed. In recent years, the number of typhoid fever cases notified in SA has decreased. However, outbreaks of typhoid fever do occasionally still occur in the country: a recent outbreak of typhoid fever occurred in 2005 in the town of Delmas (Keddy et al., 2011). In the present study, we report on the epidemiological investigation of a cluster of typhoid fever cases in Pretoria, SA, in 2010 and further report on how this outbreak strain was tracked from SA to Australia. |
| School policies and practices that improve indoor air quality
Everett Jones S , Smith AM , Wheeler LS , McManus T . J Sch Health 2010 80 (6) 280-6 BACKGROUND: To determine whether schools with a formal indoor air quality management program were more likely than schools without a formal program to have policies and practices that promote superior indoor air quality. METHODS: This study analyzed school-level data from the 2006 School Health Policies and Programs Study, a national study of school health programs and policies at the state, district, and school levels. Using chi-square analyses, the rates of policies and practices that promote indoor air quality were compared between schools with and schools without a formal indoor air quality program. RESULTS: The findings of this study show that 51.4% of schools had a formal indoor air quality management program, and that those schools were significantly more likely than were schools without a program to have policies and use strategies to promote superior indoor air quality. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that schools with a formal indoor air quality program are more likely support policies and engage in practices that promote superior indoor air quality. |
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