Title
The 2021 WHO catalogue of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex mutations associated with drug resistance: a genotypic analysis
Date Issued
01 April 2022
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Walker T.M.
Fowler P.W.
Knaggs J.
Hunt M.
Peto T.E.
Walker A.S.
Crook D.W.
Walker T.M.
Miotto P.
Cirillo D.M.
Köser C.U.
Knaggs J.
Iqbal Z.
Hunt M.
Chindelevitch L.
Farhat M.R.
Comas I.
Comas I.
Posey J.
Omar S.V.
Peto T.E.
Walker A.S.
Crook D.W.
Suresh A.
Uplekar S.
Laurent S.
Colman R.E.
Rodwell T.C.
Nathanson C.M.
Zignol M.
Ismail N.
Rodwell T.C.
Walker A.S.
Steyn A.J.C.
Lalvani A.
Baulard A.
Christoffels A.
Mendoza-Ticona A.
Trovato A.
Skrahina A.
Lachapelle A.S.
Brankin A.
Piatek A.
Gibertoni Cruz A.
Koch A.
Cabibbe A.M.
Spitaleri A.
Brandao A.P.
Chaiprasert A.
Suresh A.
Barbova A.
Van Rie A.
Ghodousi A.
Bainomugisa A.
Mandal A.
Roohi A.
Javid B.
Zhu B.
Letcher B.
Rodrigues C.
Nimmo C.
NATHANSON C.M.
Duncan C.
Coulter C.
Utpatel C.
Liu C.
Grazian C.
Kong C.
Köser C.U.
Wilson D.J.
Cirillo D.M.
Matias D.
Jorgensen D.
Zimenkov D.
Chetty D.
Clifton D.A.
Crook D.W.
van Soolingen D.
Liu D.
Kohlerschmidt D.
Barreira D.
Ngcamu D.
Santos Lazaro E.D.
Kelly E.
Borroni E.
Roycroft E.
Andre E.
Böttger E.C.
Robinson E.
Menardo F.
Mendes F.F.
Jamieson F.B.
Coll F.
Gao G.F.
Kasule G.W.
Rossolini G.M.
Rodger G.
Smith E.G.
Meintjes G.
Escuela de Higiene y Medicina Tropical de Londres
Publisher(s)
Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
Background: Molecular diagnostics are considered the most promising route to achievement of rapid, universal drug susceptibility testing for Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC). We aimed to generate a WHO-endorsed catalogue of mutations to serve as a global standard for interpreting molecular information for drug resistance prediction. Methods: In this systematic analysis, we used a candidate gene approach to identify mutations associated with resistance or consistent with susceptibility for 13 WHO-endorsed antituberculosis drugs. We collected existing worldwide MTBC whole-genome sequencing data and phenotypic data from academic groups and consortia, reference laboratories, public health organisations, and published literature. We categorised phenotypes as follows: methods and critical concentrations currently endorsed by WHO (category 1); critical concentrations previously endorsed by WHO for those methods (category 2); methods or critical concentrations not currently endorsed by WHO (category 3). For each mutation, we used a contingency table of binary phenotypes and presence or absence of the mutation to compute positive predictive value, and we used Fisher's exact tests to generate odds ratios and Benjamini-Hochberg corrected p values. Mutations were graded as associated with resistance if present in at least five isolates, if the odds ratio was more than 1 with a statistically significant corrected p value, and if the lower bound of the 95% CI on the positive predictive value for phenotypic resistance was greater than 25%. A series of expert rules were applied for final confidence grading of each mutation. Findings: We analysed 41 137 MTBC isolates with phenotypic and whole-genome sequencing data from 45 countries. 38 215 MTBC isolates passed quality control steps and were included in the final analysis. 15 667 associations were computed for 13 211 unique mutations linked to one or more drugs. 1149 (7·3%) of 15 667 mutations were classified as associated with phenotypic resistance and 107 (0·7%) were deemed consistent with susceptibility. For rifampicin, isoniazid, ethambutol, fluoroquinolones, and streptomycin, the mutations' pooled sensitivity was more than 80%. Specificity was over 95% for all drugs except ethionamide (91·4%), moxifloxacin (91·6%) and ethambutol (93·3%). Only two resistance mutations were identified for bedaquiline, delamanid, clofazimine, and linezolid as prevalence of phenotypic resistance was low for these drugs. Interpretation: We present the first WHO-endorsed catalogue of molecular targets for MTBC drug susceptibility testing, which is intended to provide a global standard for resistance interpretation. The existence of this catalogue should encourage the implementation of molecular diagnostics by national tuberculosis programmes. Funding: Unitaid, Wellcome Trust, UK Medical Research Council, and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Start page
e265
End page
e273
Volume
3
Issue
4
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Enfermedades infecciosas Bioquímica, Biología molecular Genética, Herencia
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85127127568
Source
The Lancet Microbe
ISSN of the container
26665247
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust/Newton Fund-Medical Research Council Collaborative Award (200205/Z/15/Z), Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust (OPP1133541), and supported by a grant from Unitaid. This research was funded, in part, by the Wellcome Trust (200205/Z/15/Z). For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission. A complete funding statement can be found in appendix 1. We would like to thank Marcel Behr, Joconiah Chirenda, Tom Connor, Marcelo Cordeiro dos Santos, Lauren Cowan, Julio Croda, Chhavarath Dary, James Dawson, Bouke de Jong, Han de Neeling, Keertan Dheda, Tatiana Dutra, Konstantin Edokimov, David Englethaler, Neel Gandhi, Amy Gaskin, Solomon Ghebremichael, Li-Yang Hsu, Faisal Masood Khanzada, HeeJin Kim, Afrânio Kritski, Connie Lam, Maria Lucia Rossetti, Flora Martinez, Elena Martinez, Neil Martinson, Barun Mathema, Vidya Mave, Anju Kagal, Neeta Pradham, Jonathan Golub, Amita Gupta, Conor Meehan, Isabela Neves de Almeida, Anna P Ralph, Alamdar Hussain Rizvi, Moises Palaci, Eddy Qing-Hao Miow, Alex Rosenthal, Richard Salvato, Giri Shan Rajahram, Elisangela Silva, Mel Spigelman, Silvana Spindola de Miranda, Grant Theron, Juan Carlos Toro, and Oren Tzfadia for efforts to contribute data and other support. CUK is a consultant for Becton Dickinson, FIND, and the TB Alliance. CUK is collaborating with Janssen, PZA Innovation, and Thermo Fisher Scientific; worked as a consultant for QuantuMDx, the Stop TB Partnership, the WHO Global TB Programme, and the WHO Regional Office for Europe; and gave a paid educational talk for Oxford Immunotec. Hain Lifescience covered CUK's travel and accommodation to present at a meeting. CUK is an unpaid adviser to BioVersys and GenoScreen. ERR is employed by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) and holds an honorary contract with Imperial College London. IFL is director of the Scottish Mycobacteria Reference Laboratory. SN receives funding from German Center for Infection Research, Excellenz Cluster Precision Medicine in Chronic Inflammation, and Leibniz Science Campus Evolutionary Medicine of the LUNG (EvoLUNG)tion EXC 2167. PS is a consultant at Genoscreen. TR is funded by the National Institutes for Health and US Department of Defence and receives salary support from the non-profit organisation FIND. TR is a cofounder, board member, and shareholder of Verus Diagnostics, a company that was founded with the intent of developing diagnostic assays. Verus Diagnostics was not involved in any way with data collection, analysis, or publication of the results, and TR has not received any financial support from Verus Diagnostics. University of California, San Diego (UCSD) Conflict of Interest office has reviewed and approved TR's role in Verus Diagnostics. TR is a coinventor of a provisional patent for a TB diagnostic assay (provisional patent 63/048.989). TR is a coinventor on a patent associated with the processing of tuberculosis sequencing data (European Patent Application 14840432.0 & USSN 14/912,918). TR has agreed to “donate all present and future interest in and rights to royalties from this patent” to UCSD to ensure that he does not receive any financial benefits from this patent. SS works and holds stock options at HaystackAnalytics (Product: Using whole genome sequencing for drug susceptibility testing for Mycobacterium tuberculosis). GFG is listed as an inventor on patent applications for RBD-dimer-based coronavirus vaccines. The patents for these RBD dimers as protein subunit vaccines for SARS-CoV-2 have been licensed to Anhui Zhifei Longcom Biopharmaceutical. IC is a consultant for FIND. DAC reports funding from GlaxoSmithKline and consultancy fees from Biobeats, Oxford University Innovation, and Sensyne Health. CC reports funding from FIND to his institution (Pathology Queensland, Queensland Department of Health) for his laboratory to perform molecular analytic studies (limits of detection) for new molecular platforms manufactured by Cepheid and Bioneer. The other authors declare no competing interests.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus