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Incidence and transmission patterns of tuberculosis among indigenous populations in Brazil

Abstract

Approximately 10% of the Brazilian indigenous population lives in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul (MS), where a large number of new cases of tuberculosis (TB) are reported. This study was conducted to assess TB occurrence, transmission and the utility of TB diagnosis based on the Ogawa-Kudoh (O-K) culture method in this remote population. The incidence of TB was estimated by a retrospective review of the surveillance data maintained by the Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System for the study region. The TB transmission pattern among indigenous people was assessed by genotyping Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates using the IS 6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) technique. Of the 3,093 cases identified from 1999-2001, 610 (~20%) were indigenous patients (average incidence: 377/100,000/year). The use of the O-K culture method increased the number of diagnosed cases by 34.1%. Of the genotyped isolates from 52 indigenous patients, 33 (63.5%) belonged to cluster RFLP patterns, indicating recently transmitted TB. These results demonstrate high, on-going TB transmission rates among the indigenous people of MS and indicate that new efforts are needed to disrupt these current transmissions.

tuberculosis; genotyping; microbiology; molecular epidemiology; South American indigenous people


In Brazil, the incidence and mortality from tuberculosis (TB) decreased by 20% and 30% from 1990-2010, respectively. However, TB control remains an important challenge in the country ( Barreto et al. 2011Barreto ML, Teixeira MG, Bastos FIP, Ximenes RAA, Barata RB, Rodrigues LC 2011. Successes and failures in the control of infectious diseases in Brazil: social and environmental context, policies, interventions and research needs. Lancet377: 1877-1889. , Oliveira et al. 2013Oliveira GP, Torrens AW, Bartholomay P, Barreira D 2013. Tuberculosis in Brazil: last ten years analysis - 2001-2010. Braz J Infect Dis 17 : 218-233. ).

One particular challenge is the control of TB among remote populations, such as the indigenous populations of Brazil. The high incidence and mortality resulting from TB, initially described in the mid-20th century among indigenous people ( Costa 1987Costa DC 1987. Política indigenista e assistência à saúde. Noel Nutels e o Serviço de Unidades Sanitárias Aéreas. Cad Saude Publica 4 : 388-401. ), has remained unchanged ( Marques & Cunha 2003Marques AMC, Cunha RV 2003. A medicação assistida e os índices de cura de tuberculose e de abandono de tratamento na população indígena Guaraní-Kaiowá no município de Dourados, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 19 : 405-411. , Basta et al. 2006Basta PC, Coimbra Jr CEA, Camacho LAB, Santos RV 2006. Risk of tuberculosis infection in an indigenous population from Amazônia, Brazil. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 10 : 1354-1359. , 2010Basta PC, Coimbra Jr CEA, Welch JR, Alves LCC, Santos RV, Camacho LAB 2010. Tuberculosis among the Xavante Indians of the Brazilian Amazon: an epidemiological and ethnographic assessment. Ann Hum Biol 37 : 643-657. , Bóia et al. 2009Bóia MN, Carvalho-Costa FA, Sodré FC, Porras-Pedroza BE, Faria EC, Magalhães GAP, da Silva IM 2009. Tuberculose e parasi- tismo intestinal em população indígena na Amazônia brasileira. Rev Saude Publica 43 : 176-178. , Marques et al. 2010Marques AMC, Pompilio MA, Santos SC, Garnês SJA, Cunha RV 2010. Tuberculose em indígenas menores de 15 anos no estado de Mato Grosso do Sul. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop 43 : 700-704. , Croda et al. 2012Croda MG, Trajber Z, Lima RC, Croda J 2012. Tuberculosis control in a highly endemic indigenous community in Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 106 : 223-229. , Rios et al. 2013Rios DPG, Malacarne J, Alves LCC, Sant’anna CC, Camacho LAB, Basta PC 2013. Tuberculose em indígenas da Amazônia brasilei- ra: estudo epidemiológico na região do Alto Rio Negro. Rev Panam de Salud Publica 33 : 22-29. , Sacchi et al. 2013Sacchi FP, Croda MG, Estevan AO, Ko AI, Croda J 2013. Sugar cane manufacturing is associated with tuberculosis in an indigenous population in Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 107 : 152-157. ). It is not known if the high incidence of TB represents a high rate of current transmission or reactivation of previous TB infections.

In the 1960s, in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul (MS), Cauiá Evangelical Mission built a new hospital [Porta da Esperança Hospital (PEH)] in the municipality of Dourados to provide healthcare service for its indigenous patients. Approximately 30 years later, the local healthcare authorities initiated a program to expand case detection and TB diagnostic tests to improve treatment among the indigenous people. As part of this program, the Ogawa-Kudoh (O-K) method to culture sputum was introduced with support from the Central Laboratory of Public Health of Mato Grosso do Sul (LACEN-MS).

The purpose of this study was to describe TB incidence and transmission patterns among indigenous people in MS during the period ranging from 1999-2001 and to assess the improvement in TB case detection based on the O-K culture method.

MS had a population of 2,078,072 people in 2000, of which 53,900 (2.6%) belonged to indigenous groups ( IBGE 2011IBGE - Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística 2011. Sistema IBGE de Recuperação Automática [cited 2011 August 8]. Available from: sidra.ibge.gov.br/bda/tabela/protabl.asp?c=2093&z=cd&o=11&i=P.
sidra.ibge.gov.br/bda/tabela/protabl.asp...
). During the study period, the Special Indigenous Health District of Mato Grosso do Sul (DSEI-MS) provided healthcare assistance to individuals of the Guarani-Kaoiwá, Terena, Kadiwéu, Kinikinawa and Guató ethnic groups. The DSEI-MS was organised into 13 Primary Care Units covering 29 municipalities, which included over 15,000 households scattered across 75 villages.

At the time of the study, PEH conducted clinical assessment and collection of biological samples for all indigenous patients suspected to have TB. The O-K culture method was implemented in September 1999.

Reported patient data were reviewed from the Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (SINAN) for MS and from reports available at PEH covering the period from 1999-2001.

All indigenous patients who started TB treatment and were reported by the SINAN were included in the analysis to estimate incidence. Assessment of improvements in diagnosis after the introduction of the O-K culture method was based on guidelines of the Pan-American Health Organization ( OMS/OPAS 2008OMS/OPAS - Organización Mundial de la Salud/Organización Panamericana de la Salud 2008. Manual para el diagnóstico bacteriológico de la tuberculosis: normas y guía técnica - Parte II. Cultivo. Available from: paho.org/spanish/ad/dpc/cd/tb-laboratórios-cultivo.pdf.
paho.org/spanish/ad/dpc/cd/tb-laboratóri...
) and on a proposal by McCarthy et al. (2008)McCarthy KD, Metchock B, Kanphukiew A, Monkongdee P, Sinthuwattanawibool C, Tasaneeyapan T, Rienthong S, Ngamlert K, Srisuwanvilai LO, Varma JK 2008. Monitoring the performance of mycobacteriology laboratories: a proposal for standardized indicators. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 12 : 1015-1020. .

At the PEH laboratory, the sputum specimens were examined by microscopy (Ziehl-Neelsen staining) and were cultured after decontamination by the swab method with 4% sodium hydroxide and inoculated in O-K egg-based medium ( WHO 1998WHO - World Health Organization 1998. Laboratory services in tuberculosis control. Part III: culture , WHO, Geneva, 97 pp. ). Once seeded, cultures were sent to LACEN-MS where they were incubated at 37ºC. The results (negative or positive) were reported within 60 days of incubation. A drug susceptibility test (DST) was performed using Canetti’s proportion method for isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, ethambutol and streptomycin ( Canetti et al. 1963Canetti G, Rist N, Grosset J 1963. Mesure de la sensibilité du bacille tuberculeux aux drogues antibacillairespar la méthode des proportions. Méthodologie, critères de résistance, résultats, interprétation. Rev Tuberc Pneumol (Paris) 27 : 217-272. ).

Only cases in which Mycobacterium tuberculosis was isolated from culture were included in the analysis of transmission patterns. M. tuberculosis isolates were genotyped according to a standardised IS 6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) method described by van Embden et al. (1993)van Embden JDA, Cave MD, Crawford JT, Dale JW, Eisenach KD, Gicquel B, Herman P, Martin C, McAdam R, Schinnick TM, Small PM 1993. Strain identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by DNA fingerprint: recommendations for a standardized methodology. J Clin Microbiol 31 : 406-409.. RFLP-IS 6110 gel electrophoretic banding patterns were analysed using the BioNumerics software, version 5.0 (Applied Maths, Kortrijk, Belgium). Patterns were compared according to pair groups based on non-weighted arithmetic averages and Dice coefficients. Two or more isolates were defined as belonging to a cluster when their IS 6110 electrophoretic band patterns were indistinguishable. These strains were considered to have been isolated from TB patients who acquired the infection recently. Strains with profiles in which the similarity index was equal to or higher than 65% were grouped as belonging to a family.

This study was part of a wider research project titled Epidemiological Assessment and Operationalisation to Diagnose Tuberculosis in the Guarani-Kaiowá Population in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul. This project was approved by the Research Ethical Committee of the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul and by the National Commission of Research Ethics (126/2001).

According to the data available from SINAN, 3,093 TB cases were reported from MS from 1999-2001, of which 610 (~20%) occurred among indigenous individuals. Of this total, 562 (92.1%), 33 (5.4%) and 15 (2.5%) were cases of pulmonary, extrapulmonary and mixed-form disease in indigenous patients vs. 2,108 (85.3%), 319 (12.9%) and 43 (1.7%) in non-indigenous patients, respectively. Most individuals (63.4%) were male. The mean age of indigenous patients was 25 years vs. 40 years among non-indigenous individuals (p < 0.001). The mean annual incidence, based on data for the year 2000 (median of the period), was 424.9/100,000 for the indigenous population vs. 38.1/100,000 for non-indigenous residents (48.1/100,000 residents for the state as a whole).

More than half of the cases among indigenous individuals were reported from the Primary Care Unit of Dourados, which reported an average incidence of 1,102 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. The Amambai, Antônio João and Caarapó Primary Care Units had 540, 474 and 288 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, respectively ( Table I ). In the study period, 797 patients were evaluated and 321 TB cases were diagnosed at PEH (52% of all indigenous notified cases). For diagnostic investigation, 1,539 sputum smears and 1,441 cultures were performed, of which 126 samples tested positive for Mycobacterium . Mycobacterium organisms were identified in 126 specimens from 99 patients. Four of the 126 samples were Mycobacterium spp other than M. tuberculosis .

Of the 99 culture-positive cases, 43 were smear-negative and 55 were smear-positive. In one of the positive culture samples, the smear test was not performed. Of the 1,441 cultures performed, 16 (1.1%) were smear-positive and culture-negative, nine (0.6%) were smear-positive and culture-contaminated and 78 (5.4%) were contaminated. The culture detection method increased the TB diagnosis frequency by 34.1%. Of the 90 M. tuberculosis isolates subjected to DST, all were sensitive to the five drugs tested.

RFLP-IS 6110 genotyping was performed on 52 (52.2%) M. tuberculosis isolates from 99 patients. The number of IS 6110copies (bands) ranged from four-17 among these isolates. Two isolates contained four bands in the same position, suggesting contamination by two strains and were excluded from the analysis ( Figure ).

Of the genotyped isolates, 52 were isolated from indigenous patients, while seven were obtained from non-indigenous patients. Thirty-three (63.5%) belonged to cluster profiles A, B, B1, D, E, G, G1, G4 and G5. The number of strains per each cluster ranged from two-eight. Twenty-nine strains were distributed into only three families (A, B, G), totalling nearly 56% of all analysed strains ( Table II ). There were no differences in the mean age or gender according to cluster vs. non-cluster RFLP patterns.

A noteworthy feature was that in the village of Bororó, four strains of the B family and five strains of the G family were identified. In the village of Jaguapiru, two group D strains were isolated and in the village of Itaum, two G1 strains were found. One group A and two group E strains were identified in the village of Amambai. These findings allowed an epidemiologic connection to be established for 16 (30.8% of 52) indigenous individuals ( Table II ). The number of available strains from non-indigenous patients that were genotyped (n = 7) was too small to make any conclusions about transmission patterns.

This investigation confirmed that TB is a major healthcare concern for the indigenous populations of MS and demonstrated that the incidence during the study period was far greater than the national and regional averages or the incidence among non-indigenous people ( Croda et al. 2012Croda MG, Trajber Z, Lima RC, Croda J 2012. Tuberculosis control in a highly endemic indigenous community in Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 106 : 223-229. , Oliveira et al. 2013Oliveira GP, Torrens AW, Bartholomay P, Barreira D 2013. Tuberculosis in Brazil: last ten years analysis - 2001-2010. Braz J Infect Dis 17 : 218-233. ). Based on genotyping test results, a high rate of recent transmission appears to be occurring in indigenous subjects.

The implementation of the swab method with inoculation in O-K medium increased case detection by 34.1% compared to smear microscopy alone.

The use of this method for diagnosing TB in an indigenous population in Brazil for the first time was based on its ease of use because centrifugation is not required and the risk of contamination posed to healthcare professionals is lower. Furthermore, the method ensures incubation for up to 20 days after seeding, without compromising performance ( Sushemihl et al. 1993Sushemihl MAAMM, Ferrazoli L, Ueki SYM, Gimenez RD, Palaci M 1993. Avaliação do método de Ogawa-Kudoh para o cultivo de micobactérias. Rev Bras Patol Clin 29 : 51-54. , Honscha et al. 2008Honscha G, von Groll A, Valença M, Ramos DF, Sanchotene K, Scaini CJ, Ribeiro MO, da Silva PEA 2008. The laboratory as tool to qualify tuberculosis diagnosis. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 12 : 218-220. , Jaspe et al. 2009Jaspe RC, Rojas YM, Flores LA, Toro S, Takiff H, Waard JH 2009. Evaluation of the Kudoh swab method for the culturing of Mycobacterium tuberculosisin rural areas. Trop Med Int Health 14 : 468-471. , Rivas et al. 2010Rivas C, Coitinho C, Dafond V, Corbo M, Baldjian M 2010. Performance of the Ogawa-Kudoh method for isolation of mycobacteria in a laboratory with large-scale workload. Rev Argent Microbiol 42 : 87-90. , Palaci et al. 2013Palaci M, Peres RL, Maia R, Cunha EA, Ribeiro MO, Lecco R, Ribeiro CS, Silva RRF, Vinhas SA, Dietze R, Vianna S, de Morais CG 2013. Contribution of the Ogawa-Kudoh swab culture method to the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in Brazil. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 17 : 782-786. ).

The high level of genotype similarity among M. tuberculosis strains within indigenous villages in Amambai and Dourados differs from the patterns described for other locations in Brazil ( Fandinho et al. 2000Fandinho FCO, Kritiski AL, Hofer C, Conde HR, Ferreira RMC, Saad MH, Silva MG, Riley LW, Fonseca LS 2000. RFLP patterns and risk factors for recent tuberculosis transmission among hospitalized tuberculosis patients in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 94 : 271-275. , Ferrazoli et al. 2000Ferrazoli L, Palaci M, Marques LRM, Jamal LF, Afiune JB, Chimara E, Martins MC, Silva Telles MA, Oliveira CA, Palhares MC, Spada DT, Riley LW 2000. Transmission of tuberculosis in an endemic urban setting in Brazil. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 4 : 1-8. , Suffys et al. 2000Suffys PN, de Araujo MEI, Rosseti ML, Zaha A, Barroso EW, Barreto AMW, Campos E, van Solingen D, Kremer K, Heersma H, Degrave 2000. Usefulness of IS6110-restriction fragment length polymorphism typing of Brazilian strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis an comparison with an international fingerprint database. Res Microbiol 151 : 343-351. , Valim et al. 2006Valim ARM, Possuelo GL, Cafrune PI, Borges M, Ribeiro MO, Rossetti ML, Zaha A 2006. Evaluation and genotyping of multidrug-resistant cases of tuberculosis in southern Brazil. Microb Drug Resist 12 : 186-191. ) and other countries ( Frieden et al. 1996Frieden TR, Woodley CL, Crawford JT, Lew D, Dooley SM 1996. The molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis in New York City: the importance of nosocomial transmission and laboratory error. Int J Tuber Lung Dis 77 : 407-413. , Ferdinand et al. 2003Ferdinand S, Sola C, Verdol B, Legrand E, Goh KS, Berchel M, Aubéry A, Timothée M, Joseph P, Pape JW, Rastogi N 2003. Molecular characterization and drug resistance patterns of strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from patients in an AIDS Counseling Center in Port-au-Prince, Haiti: a 1-year study. J Clin Microbiol 41 : 694-702. , Hu et al. 2011Hu Y, Mathema B, Jiang W, Kreiswirt B, Weibing W, Xu B 2011. Transmission pattern of drug-resistant tuberculosis and implication for tuberculosis control in eastern rural China. PLoS ONE 6 : e19548. ), although these studies have focused on multidrug-resistant strains.

Comparable levels of similarity between strains have been reported among the Inuit in Canada (76%) ( Nguyen et al. 2003Nguyen D, Proulx JF, Westley J, Louise T, Dery S, Behr M 2003. Tuberculosis in the Inuit community of Quebec, Canada. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 168 : 1353-1357. ) and the Waarao in Venezuela (78%) ( Maes et al. 2008Maes M, Kremer K, van Soolingen D, Takiff H, de Waard JH 2008. 24-Locus MIRU-VNTR genotyping is a useful tool to study the molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis among Warao Amerindians in Venezuela. Tuberculosis (Edinb) 88 : 490-494. ), in whose indigenous communities TB prevalence is higher than among the general population.

One limitation of this study is that due to inadequate storage of the isolates (frozen to -20ºC), it was not possible to perform genetic analyses on all M. tuberculosis isolates. It is possible that other strain types circulate in the region, but that they were not identified in this study. In addition, not all reported cases used to estimate the TB incidence were confirmed by bacteriological examination.

As a result of these findings, the Dourados and Amambai Primary Care Units improved their TB control activities to interrupt TB transmission. These activities included early and high-quality diagnosis (using O-K medium), timely treatment (under dots strategy) and expanded close contact tracing. Moreover, after 2001, a preventive treatment program for latent TB infections was introduced into these communities, targeting children less than 10 years of age.

As noted by Croda et al. (2012)Croda MG, Trajber Z, Lima RC, Croda J 2012. Tuberculosis control in a highly endemic indigenous community in Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 106 : 223-229. , the above activities had a positive impact on TB control in recent years. The authors analysed not only factors predictive of failure in treatment, but also mortality in Dourados from 2002-2008. The authors concluded that there was a 90% reduction in non-completion of TB treatment among the indigenous population after dots implementation. Interestingly, the non-indigenous TB patients had 4.5 times higher mortality than the indigenous TB patients. Furthermore, Marques et al. (2010)Marques AMC, Pompilio MA, Santos SC, Garnês SJA, Cunha RV 2010. Tuberculose em indígenas menores de 15 anos no estado de Mato Grosso do Sul. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop 43 : 700-704. and Santos et al. (2013)Santos SC, Marques AMC, de Oliveira RL, Cunha RV 2013. Diagnóstico da tuberculose em indígenas menores de quinze anos por meio de um sistema de pontuação em Mato Grosso do Sul. J Bras Pneumol 39 : 84-91. showed that the incidence of new TB cases in children less than 10 years of age decreased by approximately 40% between 2000-2006.

However, given the precarious living conditions of the indigenous populations (marked by poverty, hunger, malnutrition, anaemia, high parasite infestation and high infant mortality rates), combined with the confinement of these population to small areas (reservations, whose boundaries have been defined and approved by the federal government), TB incidence rates remain unacceptably high at approximately 200 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. Here, we have shown that the O-K culture method is simple, practical and inexpensive and that it increases case detection rates among this remote population. Nevertheless, new concerted efforts and investments are required to better characterise factors that contribute to the current high transmission frequencies among indigenous peoples from MS.

TABLE I
Population, number of tuberculosis cases (all forms) and incidence rate per 100,000 residents, by Primary Care Unit of the state of Mato Grosso do Sul (MS), Brazil, 1999-2001a

TABLE II
Characteristics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains by village according to cluster and non-cluster restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) patterns, state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, 1999-2001

To the team of the DSEI-MS, to Roselene Lopes de Oliveira and Nelson Carmelo Olazar, to Wanderley Guenka, DESAI/FUNASA, Brasília, to the Missão Caiuá Hospital team, for granted access to patients and their charts, to former member Irene Castilho, and to Aleuyr de Oliveira Lima, LACEN-MS.

REFERENCES

  • Barreto ML, Teixeira MG, Bastos FIP, Ximenes RAA, Barata RB, Rodrigues LC 2011. Successes and failures in the control of infectious diseases in Brazil: social and environmental context, policies, interventions and research needs. Lancet377: 1877-1889.
  • Basta PC, Coimbra Jr CEA, Camacho LAB, Santos RV 2006. Risk of tuberculosis infection in an indigenous population from Amazônia, Brazil. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 10 : 1354-1359.
  • Basta PC, Coimbra Jr CEA, Welch JR, Alves LCC, Santos RV, Camacho LAB 2010. Tuberculosis among the Xavante Indians of the Brazilian Amazon: an epidemiological and ethnographic assessment. Ann Hum Biol 37 : 643-657.
  • Bóia MN, Carvalho-Costa FA, Sodré FC, Porras-Pedroza BE, Faria EC, Magalhães GAP, da Silva IM 2009. Tuberculose e parasi- tismo intestinal em população indígena na Amazônia brasileira. Rev Saude Publica 43 : 176-178.
  • Canetti G, Rist N, Grosset J 1963. Mesure de la sensibilité du bacille tuberculeux aux drogues antibacillairespar la méthode des proportions. Méthodologie, critères de résistance, résultats, interprétation. Rev Tuberc Pneumol (Paris) 27 : 217-272.
  • Costa DC 1987. Política indigenista e assistência à saúde. Noel Nutels e o Serviço de Unidades Sanitárias Aéreas. Cad Saude Publica 4 : 388-401.
  • Croda MG, Trajber Z, Lima RC, Croda J 2012. Tuberculosis control in a highly endemic indigenous community in Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 106 : 223-229.
  • Fandinho FCO, Kritiski AL, Hofer C, Conde HR, Ferreira RMC, Saad MH, Silva MG, Riley LW, Fonseca LS 2000. RFLP patterns and risk factors for recent tuberculosis transmission among hospitalized tuberculosis patients in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 94 : 271-275.
  • Ferdinand S, Sola C, Verdol B, Legrand E, Goh KS, Berchel M, Aubéry A, Timothée M, Joseph P, Pape JW, Rastogi N 2003. Molecular characterization and drug resistance patterns of strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from patients in an AIDS Counseling Center in Port-au-Prince, Haiti: a 1-year study. J Clin Microbiol 41 : 694-702.
  • Ferrazoli L, Palaci M, Marques LRM, Jamal LF, Afiune JB, Chimara E, Martins MC, Silva Telles MA, Oliveira CA, Palhares MC, Spada DT, Riley LW 2000. Transmission of tuberculosis in an endemic urban setting in Brazil. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 4 : 1-8.
  • Frieden TR, Woodley CL, Crawford JT, Lew D, Dooley SM 1996. The molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis in New York City: the importance of nosocomial transmission and laboratory error. Int J Tuber Lung Dis 77 : 407-413.
  • Honscha G, von Groll A, Valença M, Ramos DF, Sanchotene K, Scaini CJ, Ribeiro MO, da Silva PEA 2008. The laboratory as tool to qualify tuberculosis diagnosis. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 12 : 218-220.
  • Hu Y, Mathema B, Jiang W, Kreiswirt B, Weibing W, Xu B 2011. Transmission pattern of drug-resistant tuberculosis and implication for tuberculosis control in eastern rural China. PLoS ONE 6 : e19548.
  • IBGE - Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística 2011. Sistema IBGE de Recuperação Automática [cited 2011 August 8]. Available from: sidra.ibge.gov.br/bda/tabela/protabl.asp?c=2093&z=cd&o=11&i=P.
    » sidra.ibge.gov.br/bda/tabela/protabl.asp?c=2093&z=cd&o=11&i=P
  • Jaspe RC, Rojas YM, Flores LA, Toro S, Takiff H, Waard JH 2009. Evaluation of the Kudoh swab method for the culturing of Mycobacterium tuberculosisin rural areas. Trop Med Int Health 14 : 468-471.
  • Maes M, Kremer K, van Soolingen D, Takiff H, de Waard JH 2008. 24-Locus MIRU-VNTR genotyping is a useful tool to study the molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis among Warao Amerindians in Venezuela. Tuberculosis (Edinb) 88 : 490-494.
  • Marques AMC, Cunha RV 2003. A medicação assistida e os índices de cura de tuberculose e de abandono de tratamento na população indígena Guaraní-Kaiowá no município de Dourados, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brasil. Cad Saude Publica 19 : 405-411.
  • Marques AMC, Pompilio MA, Santos SC, Garnês SJA, Cunha RV 2010. Tuberculose em indígenas menores de 15 anos no estado de Mato Grosso do Sul. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop 43 : 700-704.
  • McCarthy KD, Metchock B, Kanphukiew A, Monkongdee P, Sinthuwattanawibool C, Tasaneeyapan T, Rienthong S, Ngamlert K, Srisuwanvilai LO, Varma JK 2008. Monitoring the performance of mycobacteriology laboratories: a proposal for standardized indicators. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 12 : 1015-1020.
  • Nguyen D, Proulx JF, Westley J, Louise T, Dery S, Behr M 2003. Tuberculosis in the Inuit community of Quebec, Canada. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 168 : 1353-1357.
  • Oliveira GP, Torrens AW, Bartholomay P, Barreira D 2013. Tuberculosis in Brazil: last ten years analysis - 2001-2010. Braz J Infect Dis 17 : 218-233.
  • OMS/OPAS - Organización Mundial de la Salud/Organización Panamericana de la Salud 2008. Manual para el diagnóstico bacteriológico de la tuberculosis: normas y guía técnica - Parte II. Cultivo. Available from: paho.org/spanish/ad/dpc/cd/tb-laboratórios-cultivo.pdf.
    » paho.org/spanish/ad/dpc/cd/tb-laboratórios-cultivo.pdf
  • Palaci M, Peres RL, Maia R, Cunha EA, Ribeiro MO, Lecco R, Ribeiro CS, Silva RRF, Vinhas SA, Dietze R, Vianna S, de Morais CG 2013. Contribution of the Ogawa-Kudoh swab culture method to the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in Brazil. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 17 : 782-786.
  • Rios DPG, Malacarne J, Alves LCC, Sant’anna CC, Camacho LAB, Basta PC 2013. Tuberculose em indígenas da Amazônia brasilei- ra: estudo epidemiológico na região do Alto Rio Negro. Rev Panam de Salud Publica 33 : 22-29.
  • Rivas C, Coitinho C, Dafond V, Corbo M, Baldjian M 2010. Performance of the Ogawa-Kudoh method for isolation of mycobacteria in a laboratory with large-scale workload. Rev Argent Microbiol 42 : 87-90.
  • Sacchi FP, Croda MG, Estevan AO, Ko AI, Croda J 2013. Sugar cane manufacturing is associated with tuberculosis in an indigenous population in Brazil. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 107 : 152-157.
  • Santos SC, Marques AMC, de Oliveira RL, Cunha RV 2013. Diagnóstico da tuberculose em indígenas menores de quinze anos por meio de um sistema de pontuação em Mato Grosso do Sul. J Bras Pneumol 39 : 84-91.
  • Suffys PN, de Araujo MEI, Rosseti ML, Zaha A, Barroso EW, Barreto AMW, Campos E, van Solingen D, Kremer K, Heersma H, Degrave 2000. Usefulness of IS6110-restriction fragment length polymorphism typing of Brazilian strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis an comparison with an international fingerprint database. Res Microbiol 151 : 343-351.
  • Sushemihl MAAMM, Ferrazoli L, Ueki SYM, Gimenez RD, Palaci M 1993. Avaliação do método de Ogawa-Kudoh para o cultivo de micobactérias. Rev Bras Patol Clin 29 : 51-54.
  • Valim ARM, Possuelo GL, Cafrune PI, Borges M, Ribeiro MO, Rossetti ML, Zaha A 2006. Evaluation and genotyping of multidrug-resistant cases of tuberculosis in southern Brazil. Microb Drug Resist 12 : 186-191.
  • van Embden JDA, Cave MD, Crawford JT, Dale JW, Eisenach KD, Gicquel B, Herman P, Martin C, McAdam R, Schinnick TM, Small PM 1993. Strain identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by DNA fingerprint: recommendations for a standardized methodology. J Clin Microbiol 31 : 406-409.
  • WHO - World Health Organization 1998. Laboratory services in tuberculosis control. Part III: culture , WHO, Geneva, 97 pp.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    04 Nov 2013
  • Date of issue
    Feb 2014

History

  • Received
    11 Feb 2013
  • Accepted
    5 Sept 2013
Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde Av. Brasil, 4365 - Pavilhão Mourisco, Manguinhos, 21040-900 Rio de Janeiro RJ Brazil, Tel.: (55 21) 2562-1222, Fax: (55 21) 2562 1220 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
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