Epidemiologic Usefulness of Spoligotyping for Secondary Typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates with Low Copy Numbers of IS 6110

Abstract
Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of IS 6110 is commonly used to DNA fingerprint Mycobacterium tuberculosis . However, low-copy (≤5) IS 6110 M. tuberculosis strains are poorly differentiated, requiring secondary typing. When spoligotyping was used as the secondary method, only 13% of Maryland culture-positive tuberculosis (TB) patients with low-copy IS 6110 -spoligotyped clustered strains had epidemiologic linkages to another patient, compared to 48% of those with high-copy strains clustered by IS 6110 alone ( P < 0.01). Spoligotyping did not improve a population-based molecular epidemiologic study of recent TB transmission.

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