The spread of human an invasive chloramphenicol
resistant Salmonella Typhimurium is the causative agent.
Researchers have found that the spread of a
dangerous pathogen that can be fatal in up to 45% of people infected in
sub-Sahara Africa may have been instigated by the emergence and spread of HIV
in Africa. The study also found that one of the major contributing factors for
the successful spread of the disease -- non-Typhoidal Salmonella (iNTS) -- was
the acquisition of genes that afford resistance to several front line drugs
used to treat blood-borne infection such as iNTS.
A new study out September 30 reveals that
the emergence and spread of a rapidly evolving invasive intestinal disease,
that has a significant mortality rate (up to 45%) in infected people in
sub-Saharan Africa, seems to have been potentiated by the HIV epidemic in
Africa.
The team found that invasive non-Typhoidal
Salmonella (iNTS) disease is caused by a new form of the bacteria Salmonella Typhimurium that has spread
from two different focal hubs in Southern and Central Africa beginning 52 and
35 years ago, respectively. They also found that one of the major contributing
factors for the successful spread of iNTS was the acquisition of genes that
afford resistance to several front line drugs used to treat blood-borne infection
such as iNTS.
iNTS is a blood-borne infection that kills
approximately one of four people in sub-Saharan Africa who catch it. Yet, in
the rest of the world, NTS is a leading cause of acute inflammatory diarrhea
that is self-limiting and tends to be fatal in less than 1 per cent of people
infected. The disease is more severe in sub-Saharan Africa than the rest of the
world because of factors such as malnutrition, co-infection with malaria or HIV
and potentially the novel genotype of the Salmonella bacteria.
"The immune system susceptibility
provided by HIV, malaria and malnutrition at a young age, may provide a
population in sub-Saharan Africa that is large enough for this detrimental
pathogen to enter, adapt, circulate and thrive," says Chinyere Okoro,
joint first author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. "We used
whole genome sequencing to define a novel lineage of Salmonella Typhimurium
that is causing a previously unrecognised epidemic across the region. Its
genetic makeup is evolving into a more typhoid like bacteria, able to
efficiently spread around the human body"
"Because it acquired resistance to
chloramphenicol, this pathogen has much greater opportunity to survive and
spread across the region," says Professor Gordon Dougan, lead author from
the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. "This is the first time that the
power of whole-genome sequencing has been used to track the spread of iNTS. Our
research highlights the power this approach has to monitor the emergence and
spread of dangerous pathogens both locally and globally over time."
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