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Two cases of pulmonary tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis subsp. Canetti. (Dispatches).


We identified an unusual strain of mycobacteria from two patients with pulmonary tuberculosis by its smooth, glossy morphotype and, primarily, its genotypic characteristics. Spoligotyping and restriction fragment length polymorphism restriction fragment length polymorphism
n. Abbr. RFLP
Intraspecies variations in the length of DNA fragments generated by the action of restriction enzymes and caused by mutations that alter the sites at which these enzymes act, changing
 typing were carried out with the insertion sequence IS6110 patterns. All known cases of tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium canetti have been contracted in the Horn of Africa Horn of Africa, peninsula, NE Africa, opposite the S Arabia Peninsula. Also known as the Somali Peninsula, it encompasses Somalia and E Ethiopia and is the easternmost extension of the continent, separating the Gulf of Aden from the Indian Ocean. .

**********

The Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex includes the following mycobacteria, which are characterized by a slow growing rate: M. tuberculosis, M. africanum, M. bovis, and M. microti (1). In recently published reports of two cases of lymphatic node tuberculosis (TB), the strains were recognized as belonging to a new taxon taxon (pl. taxa), in biology, a term used to denote any group or rank in the classification of organisms, e.g., class, order, family.  of M. tuberculosis (2,3). These isolates were characterized by a highly particular growing pattern, and the colonies appeared smooth and glossy. A complete genetic study of these strains led to their integration into the M. tuberculosis complex. This strain, identified as M. tuberculosis subsp. canetti or, more simply, M. canetti, was first isolated in 1969 by Georges Canetti from a French farmer. The strain was preserved at the Pasteur Institute where its antigenic pattern was studied extensively. We report two cases of pulmonary TB caused by this strain. The two patients had also lived in East Africa.

The Study

Patient 1

In September 1998, a 36-year-old male soldier in the French Foreign Legion with hemoptysis Hemoptysis Definition

Hemoptysis is the coughing up of blood or bloody sputum from the lungs or airway. It may be either self-limiting or recurrent. Massive hemoptysis is defined as 200-600 mL of blood coughed up within a period of 24 hours or less.
 was sent back to France from Djibouti. He expectorated bloody sputum after running and on a few other occasions. His medical history was not unusual. When the patient was hospitalized, 2 weeks after the initial symptoms, he began to experience progressive fatigue. He did not experience fever, weight loss, night sweats, anorexia, cough, dyspnea, or chest pain, and did not produce sputum.

Results of the clinical examination were normal. The Mantoux test, performed with 10 IU of purified tuberculin tuberculin /tu·ber·cu·lin/ (-lin) a sterile solution containing the growth products of, or specific substances extracted from, the tubercle bacillus; used in various forms in the diagnosis of tuberculosis; see also under test.  (Aventis-Pasteur-MSD, Lyon, France), yielded a maximum transverse diameter of induration induration /in·du·ra·tion/ (in?du-ra´shun)
1. sclerosis or hardening.

2. hardness.

3. an abnormally hard spot or place.
 of 15 mm. Laboratory values were normal (Table). The chest X-ray showed a triangular consolidation of the left upper lobe with blurred limits and small cavitary lesions. No other contiguous mediastinohilar anomalies were visible. A computed tomographic scan confirmed the cavitary syndrome: three excavated nodular nodular

marked with, or resembling, nodules.


nodular dermatofibrosis
see dermatofibrosis.

nodular episcleritis
see nodular fasciitis (below).

nodular fasciitis
a firm painless nodular swelling, 0.
 images showed radiating spicules within a micronodular infiltrate. Bronchoscopy Bronchoscopy Definition

Bronchoscopy is a procedure in which a cylindrical fiberoptic scope is inserted into the airways. This scope contains a viewing device that allows the visual examination of the lower airways.
 showed a moderate inflammation of airway mucosa, especially in the left upper lobe. Biopsy specimens exhibited nonspecific inflammation.

A bronchial washing smear from the left upper lobe was positive for acid-fast bacilli. Serologic tests for HIV-1 and HIV-2 were negative. No evidence of disease was found elsewhere; the patient did not experience bone pain. Results of neurologic and ophthalmologic examinations were normal; no lymphadenopathy lymphadenopathy /lym·phad·e·nop·a·thy/ (-op´ah-the) disease of the lymph nodes.

angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy , angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia
 or hepatosplenomegaly were found and the genitalia were normal. Auscultation auscultation

Procedure for detecting certain defects or conditions by listening for normal and abnormal heart, breath, bowel, fetal, and other sounds in the body. The invention of the stethoscope in 1819 improved and expanded this practice, still very useful despite the
 revealed no pericardial fremitus; no ascitic fluid was detected. The urinary sediment contained <1,000 red blood cells/L and <5,000 leukocytes/L. Antituberculosis chemotherapy was begun with four drugs: rifampicin rifampicin /rif·am·pi·cin/ (rif´am-pi-sin) rifampin.

rifampin, rifampicin

a derivative of rifamycin; an antibacterial and antifungal agent used in the treatment of mycobacterial infections, actinomycosis and histoplasmosis.
, isoniazid isoniazid (ī'sōnī`əzĭd), drug used to treat tuberculosis. Also known as isonicotinic acid hydrazide, isoniazid is the most effective antituberculosis drug currently available. , ethambutol ethambutol /etham·bu·tol/ (e-tham´bu-tol) an antibacterial, specifically effective against Mycobacterium; used with one or more other antituberculous drugs in the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis, administered as the , and pyrazinamide. Cultures revealed a strain identified as M. tuberculosis subsp. canetti that was susceptible to all primary antituberculous drugs. Therefore, rifampicin and isoniazid were continued for 3 more months for a total treatment period of 6 months. The patient's response to treatment was favorable, and he remained asymptomatic.

Patient 2

A 55-year-old male soldier in the French Foreign Legion, who returned from Djibouti, was hospitalized in September 1999 after his chest x-ray showed abnormal findings. He was a nurse and had been occasionally in charge at the Djibouti Hospital for 2 years. His medical history was unremarkable. Eight months before he returned to France, he experienced asthenia, anorexia, and a weight loss of 3 kg. The symptoms resolved spontaneously after 2 months, and he had been asymptomatic since then. He had no history of cough, sputum production, hemoptysis, dyspnea, fever, or night sweats.

Results of a clinical examination and of laboratory studies were normal (Table), except for hypereosinophilia. Serologic tests for schistosomiasis schistosomiasis (shĭs`təsōmī`əsĭs), bilharziasis, or snail fever, parasitic disease caused by blood flukes, trematode worms of the genus Schistosoma. , hydatidosis, distomiasis, amebiasis amebiasis: see dysentery. , toxocariasis toxocariasis /tox·o·car·i·a·sis/ (-kah-ri´ah-sis) infection by worms of the genus Toxocara.

tox·o·ca·ri·a·sis
n.
Infection with nematodes of the genus Toxocara.
, and trichinosis trichinosis (trĭk'ĭnō`sĭs) or trichiniasis (trĭk'ĭnī`əsĭs), parasitic disease caused by the roundworm Trichinella spiralis.  were negative, and parasites were not found in stool samples. Thoracic radiographs performed when he came back from Djibouti showed parenchymal pa·ren·chy·ma  
n.
1. Anatomy The tissue characteristic of an organ, as distinguished from associated connective or supporting tissues.

2.
 consolidation of the right upper lobe with small cavities. Sputum was not produced. A gastric aspirate as·pi·rate
v.
To take in or remove by aspiration.

n.
A substance removed by aspiration.


Aspirate
The removal by suction of a fluid from a body cavity using a needle.
 smear was negative for acid-fast bacilli, and a bronchial aspiration smear was positive for acid-fast bacilli. HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  serology Serology

The division of biological science concerned with antigen-antibody reactions in serum. It properly encompasses any of these reactions, but is often used in a limited sense to denote laboratory diagnostic tests, especially for syphilis.
 was negative, and no other site of the infection was found. Drug therapy was initiated with rifampicin, isoniazid, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide for 2 months. Cultures of bronchial aspirates were positive within 14 days; later, cultures of two gastric aspirates were positive for acid-fast bacilli. An M. tuberculosis subsp. canetti isolate was identified, which was susceptible to all primary antituberculous drugs. The treatment was then extended for 4 months with rifampicin and isoniazid. The patient's response to treatment was favorable.

The following methods were used to identify the etiologic agent. First, the samples were decontaminated with N-acetyl-L-cysteine/NaOH. Acid-fast bacilli were detected by auramine staining, the positive smears also were stained with Ziehl-Nielsen stain. The samples were then seeded onto Lowenstein-Jensen and Coletsos slants and also into a liquid system, the BBL Mycobacterial Growth Indicator Tube (MGIT MGIT Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Technology (India)
MGIT Maritime Group Inport Training
, BD Diagnostic Systems, Sparks, MD).

The mycobacteria were identified by using a specific DNA probe (Gen-Probe, Gen-Probe Incorporated, San Diego, CA) and by performing the usual biochemical tests (nitrate reduction, 68[degrees]C catalase catalase /cat·a·lase/ (kat´ah-las) a hemoprotein enzyme that catalyzes the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen, protecting cells.  resistance, niacin production).

The Pasteur Institute of Paris used two methods for typing: restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP RFLP
abbr.
restriction fragment length polymorphism



RFLP

restriction fragment length polymorphism.

RFLP 
) analysis and spoligotyping. In RFLP analysis, after digestion of the M. tuberculosis strain's genomic DNA with PvuII restriction enzyme and agarose gel migration, the DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 was transferred on a membrane, according to the Southern method, and then hybridized with an insertion sequence IS6110 probe (4). In the spoligotyping method, after DNA direct repeat amplification, the labeled polymerase chain reaction polymerase chain reaction (pŏl`ĭmərās') (PCR), laboratory process in which a particular DNA segment from a mixture of DNA chains is rapidly replicated, producing a large, readily analyzed sample of a piece of DNA; the process is  product was used as a probe to hybridize hy·brid·ize  
intr. & tr.v. hy·brid·ized, hy·brid·iz·ing, hy·brid·iz·es
1. To produce or cause to produce hybrids; crossbreed.

2.
 with 43 synthetic spacer oligonucleotides (DNA sequences derived from the direct repeat [DR] region of M. tuberculosis, H37Rv and M. bovis BCG BCG bacille Calmette-Guérin.

BCG
abbr.
1. bacillus Calmette-Guérin

2. ballistocardiogram


BCG,
n.pr See bacille Calmette-Guórin.
 P3), which were attached to a carrier membrane (5). The sensitivity to antituberculous drugs was determined by the indirect proportion method.

MGIT results were positive for the two cultures in 9 and 12 days, respectively. On Lowenstein-Jensen slants, the cultures were positive in 12 and 14 days, respectively. The white, smooth, and glossy colonies were characteristic of M. tuberculosis subsp. canetti (Figure 1). The two strains had the same phenotypic and genotypic pattern; 68C catalase was negative, and they reduced nitrate, as do other M. tuberculosis species, but they did not produce niacin. The DNA probe, Gen-Probe, confirmed that these strains belonged to the M. tuberculosis complex.

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

These strains contained two copies of IS6110. Spoligotyping showed that they shared only 2 of the 43 oligonucleotides reproducing the spacer DNA sequences of M. tuberculosis, H37Rv and M. bovis BCG P3. This profile is characteristic of M. tuberculosis subsp. canetti (Figure 2).

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

Conclusion

In 1997, van Soolingen reported a case of lymph node TB in a 2-year-old Somali child on the child's arrival in the Netherlands in 1993 (2). In 1998, Pfyffer described abdominal lymphatic TB in a 56-year-old Swiss man (who lived in Kenya) with stage C2 HIV infection (3). These strains of M. canetti (So93 from the Somali child and NZM 217/94 from the Swiss man) have been studied extensively. In culture they grow faster than other strains in the M. tuberculosis complex. The So93 strain expands by one rough colony for every 500 smooth colonies. They appear smooth, white, and glossy because of the high amount of lipooligosaccharides in the membrane (6); the So93 rough colonies lack this amount (2).

Two copies of the IS6110 insertion sequence were found in the NZM 217/94 and So93 genome. This fingerprint matched None of the 5,000 other strains preserved in the laboratory of van Soolingen (Bilthoven, the Netherlands) (2). The strains we observed also showed two copies of IS6110.

So93, NZM 217/94, and our two strains share only 2 of 43 identical repeated sequences that have been observed by spoligotyping. Study of the IS6110 RFLP patterns and of the spacer DNA sequences of the DR locus confirmed that M. tuberculosis, M. bovis, M. africanum, M. microti, and M. canetti represent a closely related group of mycobacteria that are clearly distinct from other mycobacterial species. In the M. tuberculosis complex, M. canetti appears to be the most divergent strain (2).

We believe that this is the first published report of pulmonary disease caused by M. canetti. Our two cases confirm that M. canetti is able to involve lungs, like any other member of the M. tuberculosis complex and is able to affect immunocompetent im·mu·no·com·pe·tent
adj.
Having the normal bodily capacity to develop an immune response following exposure to an antigen.



im
 subjects. The clinical features of these two pulmonary cases of TB caused by M. canetti are not specific.

TB caused by M. canetti appears to be an emerging disease in the Horn of Africa. A history of a visit to the region should cause this strain to be considered promptly. As travel to this area becomes more frequent, and mycobacterial identification techniques improve, the number of diagnosed cases will likely increase.
Table. Laboratory values for both patients infected with Mycobacterium
tuberculosis subsp. canetti

Laboratory test                     Patient 1    Patient 2

Sedimentation rate (mm)               3            3
C-reactive protein (mg/L)             7.3          4.28
Fibrinogen (g/L)                      3.64         6.3
Blood count
Hemoglobin (g/dL)                    16.8         14.1
Platelets (x[10.sup.9]/L)           194          274
White cells (x[10.sup.9]/L)          10.10         9.54
Neutrophils (%)                      66.2         69.4
Eosinophils (%)                       2            8.6
Lymphocytes (%)                      21.3         17.2
Basophils (%)                         0.6          0.9
Monocytes (%)                         9.9          3.9
Aspartate aminotransferase (U/L)     21           16
Alanine aminotransferase (U/L)       19           23
Creatinine ([micro]mol/L)            89           97
Glucose (mmol/L)                      4.7          4.4


Acknowledgments

We thank Michel Fabre for the photographs and Jan Eskandari for his translation of this article.

References

(1.) Shinnick TM, Good RC. Mycobacterial taxonomy. Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis 1994;13:884-901.

(2.) van Soolingen D, Hoogenboezem T, De Haas PEW, Hermans PWM, Koedam MA, Teppema KS, et al. A novel pathogenic taxon of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, Canetti: characterization of an exceptional isolate from Africa. Int J Syst Bacteriol 1997;47:1236-45.

(3.) Pfyffer GE, Auckenthaler R, van Embden JDA, van Soolingen D. Mycobacterium canetti, the smooth variant of M. tuberculosis, isolated from a Swiss patient exposed in Africa. Emerg Infect Dis 1998;4:631-4.

(4.) van Embden JDA, Cave MD, Crawford JT, Dale JW, Eisenach KD, Gicquel B, et al. Strain identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by DNA fingerprinting: recommendations for a standardized methodology. J Clin Microbiol 1993;31:406-9.

(5.) Kamerbeek J, Schouls L, Kolk A, Van Agterveld M, van Soolingen D, Kuijper S, et al. Simultaneous detection and strain differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis for diagnosis and epidemiology. J Clin Microbiol 1997;35:907-14.

(6.) Daffe M, McNeil M, Brennan PJ. Novel type-specific lipooligosaccharides from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Biochemistry 1991;30:378-88.

Jean Miltgen, * Marc Morillon, * Jean-Louis Koeck, ([dagger]) Anne Varnerot, ([double dagger]) Jean-Francois Briant, * Gilbert Nguyen, * Denis Verrot, * Daniel Bonnet, * and Veronique Vincent ([double dagger])

* Hopital d'instruction des armees Laveran, Marseille, France; ([dagger]) Hopital d'instruction des armees Val de Grace, Paris, France; ([double dagger]) Institut Pasteur, Paris, France

Dr. Miltgen is assistant head of the Pneumology Department at the HOpital d'Instruction des Armies of Marseilles, where he specializes in tropical diseases.

Address for correspondence: Jean Miltgen, Service de pneumologie, Hopital d'instruction des armees Laveran, BP 50, 13998 Marseille, France; fax: 04 91 61 73 37; e-mail: jean.miltgen@wanadoo.fr
COPYRIGHT 2002 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Vincent, Veronique
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:60AFR
Date:Nov 1, 2002
Words:1902
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