G. Tudo et al., Detection of unsuspected cases of nosocomial transmission of tuberculosis by use of a molecular typing method, CLIN INF D, 33(4), 2001, pp. 453-459
The aim of this study was to use restriction fragment length polymorphism t
o detect unsuspected cases of nosocomial transmission of tuberculosis (TB)
among patients who had been admitted to a university hospital. One hundred
fifty-one samples of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from patients with
pulmonary TB were studied. The isolates from 37 patients (24.5%) defined 1
1 clusters. None of the patients infected with these cluster isolates had h
ospital stays that coincided with one another, and for 5.4% of the patients
, the epidemiological link was clearly outside the hospital. Previous incar
ceration was associated with infection with cluster isolates. In addition,
109 patients without TB (41 of whom were infected with human immunodeficien
cy virus) who shared a room with patients who had TB were followed for 18-6
0 months. Among the patients who survived, secondary cases of TB due to nos
ocomial transmission were not detected.