Skip directly to site content Skip directly to page options Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link Skip directly to A-Z link
Volume 8, Number 11—November 2002
THEME ISSUE
Tuberculosis Genotyping
Tuberculosis Genotyping Network, United States

Impact of Genotyping of Mycobacterium tuberculosis on Public Health Practice in Massachusetts

Author affiliations: *Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, USA; †Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; ‡New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York, USA;

Cite This Article

Abstract

Massachusetts was one of seven sentinel surveillance sites in the National Tuberculosis Genotyping and Surveillance Network. From 1996 through 2000, isolates from new patients with tuberculosis (TB) underwent genotyping. We describe the impact that genotyping had on public health practice in Massachusetts and some limitations of the technique. Through genotyping, we explored the dynamics of TB outbreaks, investigated laboratory cross-contamination, and identified Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains, transmission sites, and accurate epidemiologic links. Genotyping should be used with epidemiologic follow-up to identify how resources can best be allocated to investigate genotypic findings.

Genotyping of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates is accepted as a useful tool in many public health settings (113). Conventional epidemiology may be supported by analysis of isolates that cluster genetically by using IS6110 fingerprinting methods. Genotyping can confirm or disprove previously known epidemiologic connections or suggest unsuspected associations. We explore the impact that genotyping has had on public health practice in Massachusetts by investigating the following premises. Genotyping plays an indirect role in interrupting the transmission of tuberculosis (TB) by identifying unexpected epidemiologic links and unsuspected sites of transmission. By identifying and confirming outbreaks and their impact and aiding the investigation of laboratory cross-contamination, genotyping determines whether epidemiologic links found through conventional contact investigations represent true cases of transmission. This determination helps coordinators of TB-control programs to direct and evaluate their program activities.

Before Massachusetts become one of seven sentinel surveillance sites in the National Tuberculosis Genotyping and Surveillance Network (genotyping network), M. tuberculosis isolates were sent by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Division of Tuberculosis Prevention and Control (TB Division) to the regional laboratory (New York State Department of Health’s Wadsworth Center in Albany, New York) for genotyping on an as-needed basis. During the genotyping network study (July 1, 1996–December 31, 2000), one isolate from each new patient whose culture was positive for M. tuberculosis was sent for genotyping (14).

Methods

Laboratory Methods

Cowan and Crawford (15) and Crawford et al. (16) describe the laboratory protocol and design and methods of the genotypying network. The Wadsworth Center performed IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and spoligotyping according to standardized procedures (1618).

Genotype Cluster Identification

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) developed a standard protocol for cluster investigations. For IS6110 strains with more than six copies in their fingerprint patterns (high-copy strains), a single cluster designation was allocated if two or more patients had isolates with identical RFLP patterns. Strains with six or fewer copies in their patterns (low-copy strains) were assigned a single cluster designation if two or more patients had both identical RFLP and spoligotype patterns. The cluster investigation by the genotyping network took place from January 1, 1998, to December 31, 2000.

Epidemiologic Investigation of Clusters

To identify sources of transmission, we defined an epidemiologic link as two persons who shared space or time. For example, if a cluster included three persons (the source [A] and two subsequent patients [B and C]), the epidemiologic relationships identified for inclusion in the database would be A to B and A to C. However, when a common source was determined from outside the study, each relationship was counted only once without reference to direction (B and C, representing one link with no reference to A). An “expected link” was one found through conventional contact investigation, and an “unexpected link” was identified as a result of an RFLP cluster investigation.

To determine epidemiologic links, we reviewed medical records from health departments, hospitals, and clinics for each genotypically clustered case. Patients or their proxies were interviewed. Collected data included medical information (i.e., tuberculin skin-test results and BCG vaccine status, potential exposures, and previous diagnoses), demographics, and a 2-year social and work history.

CDC collaborated with the genotyping network sentinel sites in developing forms for data collection, patient consent, and interviews. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health institutional review board approved the protocol and forms. The patient consent form was translated into Spanish, Haitian Creole, Portuguese, Khmer, Vietnamese, and Chinese. Interpreters were present during interviews, when needed.

Laboratory Cross-Contamination

For the period 1994–1997, laboratory cross-contamination or other error was suspected if more than one specimen processed at the same time was positive for M. tuberculosis. At the time, we considered that contamination was less likely to occur between specimens processed in different batches on the same day; therefore, this type of contamination was not addressed in the study. Contamination in different batches was, however, addressed in a broader 1998 genotyping network study on laboratory cross-contamination. Data and methods from that study are described elsewhere (19).

Results

Transmission Dynamics and Public Health Implications

From July 1, 1996, to December 31, 2000, a total of 1,281 TB cases were counted in Massachusetts. Of these, 1,043 (81%) were culture confirmed as TB. Positive cultures were obtained from 1,032 patients in Massachusetts, and 95% (984) of the isolates obtained from these patients were genotyped. The remaining isolates were not genotyped for various reasons, including inability to obtain growth when subcultured, contamination with other bacteria or fungi, and inability to acquire isolates from outside laboratories. Of the 984 isolates, 776 (79%) had high-copy strains (seven or more IS6110 copies in their patterns); 712 (72%) had unique DNA fingerprints; 272 (28%) aggregated into 82 clusters. Of 208 cases with low-copy strains, 100 (48%) met the study definition of genotype cluster.

Links Established by Conventional Contact Investigation

Overall, 129 expected epidemiologic relationships in Massachusetts were identified. Of these, 37 relationships were between a person in the study and a person without a genotyped isolate (e.g., children, clinical patients). Of 92 relationships analyzed (88 persons), 67 (72%) demonstrated exact or similar (±1 hybridizing band) RFLP matches. Twenty-five relationships between 38 persons were not supported by genotyping, i.e., the isolates had different genotypes.

The 25 expected relationships not supported by genotyping were as follows: 11 in persons staying at the same homeless shelter at the same time; 5 in household contacts; 2 in nonhousehold family members, 3 in friends and social contacts, and 4 in co-workers. The five relationships involving household contacts were in persons from countries with a high prevalence of TB. These relationships included roommates from Mali, siblings from Kenya and Ethiopia, and parents and adult children from China and India.

Additional Epidemiologic Links in RFLP Cluster Investigation

In addition to the 129 epidemiologic relationships identified before RFLP results, 11 unexpected epidemiologic relationships involving 21 persons were identified. We also identified additional and some previously unrecognized places of transmission (Table). Several of these are believed to have been caused by either casual contact or unsuspected settings. For example, cluster 5 in the table consisted of three patients who ostensibly had nothing in common. However, RFLP cluster investigation established that one patient had been the hairdresser of the second patient, who was a college student. The third patient was a security guard who had worked in a college dormitory frequented by the second case. At the onset of the guard’s illness, he was working at another facility.

Extent of an Outbreak in a Homeless Shelter

Of 18 men with TB in the homeless or associated populations in 2000, isolates from 15 persons had RFLP pattern 437 or 5309. These patterns differ by a one-copy addition. Thirteen of the men were long-term users of one shelter, although eight used the shelter sporadically over many years. Two patients had positive tuberculin skin tests in the past, and two other patients were clinical patients in past years (1997 and 1995). Eleven of the 15 patients were interviewed, and only one interview provided a definite epidemiologic link between two patients. Other interviews could not establish specific dates that the cases had overlapped. We reviewed 199 bed logs from the shelter for October 1999 through June 2000, a time period between documented negative tuberculin skin tests and diagnosis of active disease for three of the patients.

Of 14 homeless men in the cluster, 2 were not on the bed logs for the entire 9-month period. The remaining 12 patients were never all present on the same day. However, 11 of the 12 patients were present on 1 day in November, and 10 of the 12 were present on 6 nights in October and November 1999. Of 15 persons in the cluster (14 guests and 1 employee), we established that 13 were epidemiologically linked. Of the other two, we believe that one man’s diagnosis resulted from a false-positive culture, and the other man arrived at the shelter after June 2000 and was likely exposed later.

Laboratory Cross-Contamination

In April and May 1994, two related instances of cross-contamination in one laboratory were identified 3 weeks apart. Five of ten cultures processed at the same time in the first instance and three of the ten in the second were submitted for RFLP analysis; they matched a strain used as a control in the decontamination and digestion procedure. The TB Division and the laboratory sent all isolates tested 2 weeks before the first instance through 2 weeks after the second instance for RFLP typing. Clinical records were reviewed, and epidemiologic follow-up was completed on all cases. No other specimens were affected.

Discussion

We identified unexpected epidemiologic links between 21 known cases of TB (Table). However, over the course of the study, we did not unearth any new unknown infectious cases of TB by using genotyping. Two possible explanations for this lack of new cases include a historically strong programmatic interest in case finding, or conversely, the difficulty of reopening contact investigations after substantial time has elapsed.

Although the Massachusetts TB Division has always practiced the concentric-circle method of contact investigation, RFLP typing has identified enough unexpected links and sites of transmission that we now focus on the time involved in the case-contact interaction even if that contact is not within the home or workplace. We have always emphasized the importance of considering the nonhousehold contact as a means of disease transmission, and we address the potential of the more casual contact on the basis some of the unexpected links we found (such as the student and security guard mentioned previously). Bishai et al. report that TB transmission continues despite active case finding and 15 years of directly observed therapy (20) and suggest that this transmission may have been in difficult-to-treat populations (such as the homeless) or the result of casual transmission. Other authors have also commented on the likely importance of casual transmission and the important role of RFLP typing in documentation (2123). If the trend in Maryland noted by Bishai et al. (20) and Sterling et al. (24) is true in otherwise well-served, financially viable TB control programs, genotyping of M. tuberculosis isolates will be essential for public health interventions in these settings.

Nearly three fourths of our cases did not cluster. Although the patients with unique patterns in our dataset may have clustered with someone outside of the study (thus underestimating clustering in our population), the high numbers of unique cases still suggest that most of our cases are due to reactivation of latent TB infection. Thus, we should concentrate resources on early identification of latent TB infection and follow-up to interrupt TB transmission. In addition, the finding that our conventional contact investigations were overestimating transmission in persons born in disease-endemic countries supports the 1998 findings of Behr et al. (25). Isolates from contacts born in foreign countries were significantly more likely to have different strains than isolates from contacts born in the United States (data not shown). This finding suggests that the public health program makes certain assumptions about the definition of close contacts that are not correct in every case.

The utility of genotyping in outbreak response cannot be overestimated. A strain designated as the genotyping network pattern 437 has been responsible for 20 cases since 1993. The strain’s reemergence in the homeless in 2000 was unsuspected, partly because men who were believed to spend few nights in homeless shelters were found to have this strain. In addition, the shelter, identified as a common site for many persons with TB, had excellent control measures. In this situation, genotyping provided evidence that warranted a thorough investigation and the development of new educational materials. Educational activities were conducted in shelters, emergency rooms, and other sites; and contacts from a large-scale screening at the site are being followed. The discovery of other unexpected clusters has resulted in involving less traditional sites in education and prevention efforts. One such educational video about TB was pilot tested in hairdressing salons in a Massachusetts community. In addition, genotyping can be applied to situations of increased cases to determine that an outbreak is not occurring, as in Hanau-Bercot et al. (8). Determining that cases have different genotypes can mean that costly mobilization of public health resources to combat an outbreak is unnecessary.

Policies to reduce cross-contamination risks have been instituted at the laboratory where cross-contamination occurred in 1994 and 1995. Live control strains are no longer used to process specimens. When a new patient’s culture grows five or fewer colonies, laboratory records are reviewed to establish the likelihood of error. However, because cross-contamination or other misclassification of a specimen or result does not rule out the possibility of a TB diagnosis, care must be taken before attributing a positive culture to error. In addition, public health programs should be able to prove or disprove laboratory contamination on a real-time basis for clinical purposes. This confirmation is important for laboratory internal quality control, can result in cost savings of several thousand dollars per misdiagnosed patient (19,26), and can save emotional and other costs to the patient.

Limitations of Genotyping Techniques

In the cluster investigation study, 105 (66%) of 159 persons in clusters were interviewed or had epidemiologic links to everyone else in their cluster, so they were not interviewed according to the protocol. Of the remaining 54 (33%), patients refused to be interviewed (10 patients). An additional patients were defined as “administratively closed” at the end of the study. These patients did not refuse to participate in the study but could not be reached after six phone attempts or three visit attempts. Several either agreed to participate or asked to be contacted later but were unreachable. Of 45 clusters investigated as part of the official cluster investigation study with patients eligible for interview, we interviewed all persons in 13 clusters.

The RFLP technique is expensive and technically demanding; it also requires microbiologic expertise and resources to obtain cultures as well as sophisticated software for RFLP pattern comparison. Thus, turnaround time between specimen collection and availability of RFLP result may be lengthy (27). In our study, this turnaround time averaged 7 months, which may have contributed to our difficulties in obtaining patient interviews. However, identifying clusters would be a slow process even with negligible turnaround times, as latent TB infection reactivates slowly. Reopening contact investigations after receipt of RFLP results was impractical in most instances. In addition, interpreting results is more difficult because of the lack of specificity in patterns with fewer than seven IS6110 copies.

A recently reported limitation of RFLP relates to sampling (28). A certain number of cases in every population cannot be assigned RFLP types. Either the specimens do not grow M. tuberculosis, or TB is diagnosed on the basis of clinical information without bacteriological confirmation. During the study period in Massachusetts, RFLP typing provided information on 95% of our culture-confirmed cases, 77 % of our cases overall.

RFLP and any other genotyping tool can be useful for TB control if certain assumptions hold true. M. tuberculosis strains are relatively stable but not immutable; thus, if persons fall into a cluster, they probably have the same TB strain. Clustering implies recent transmission because strains change over time. A few studies (2932) have analyzed the stability of RFLP patterns; one determined that half of the strains will demonstrate a shift in 3–4 years (29), while another study found no change (32). Neimann et al. saw almost no change in patterns among 75 isolates in chains of transmission, i.e., multiple patients (30). These studies cannot make assumptions about changes of patterns during latency, and rates of change of strains may vary. In addition, we assume that clustering in the TB control program’s population implies recent transmission and not simply endemic strains with a lack of diversity. We assume that sampling is complete and that no difference exists between the patients with or without available isolates for genotyping. For public health programs to benefit fully from a genotyping technique, it must be rapid, inexpensive, and reproducible from laboratory to laboratory. In general, the currently available DNA fingerprinting tools should be used only in conjunction with epidemiology. Universal fingerprinting, in particular, shows its greatest utility when the health department can respond to this new information by allocating additional resources to conduct investigations of unexpected clusters (33). Genotyping can then have as great an impact on public health practice nationwide as it had in Massachusetts.

Ms. Miller has worked as an epidemiologist for the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Division of Tuberculosis Prevention and Control, since 1996. She coordinated the activities of the Massachusetts Sentinel Surveillance Site of the National Tuberculosis Genotyping and Surveillance Network. Her primary research interests are genotyping of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates, antimicrobial resistance, and tuberculosis occurrence in homeless shelters.

Top

Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the contributions of the following: Paul Elvin, Alissa Scharf, Denise O’Connor, Michael Malone, Barbara McInnis, John Bernardo, nurses at the Boston Public Health Commission TB Division and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health Tuberculosis Division, Muriel Day, JoAnn Dopp, The Shelters; Jill Northrup, Al DeMaria, and Christopher R. Braden.

The research in this study was supported in part by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Tuberculosis Genotyping and Surveillance Network Cooperative Agreement U52/CCU100156.

Top

References

  1. Alland  D, Kalkut  GE, Moss  AR, McAdam  RA, Hahn  JA, Bosworth  W, Transmission of TB in New York City; an analysis by DNA fingerprinting and conventional epidemiologic methods. N Engl J Med. 1994;330:17106. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  2. Edlin  BR, Tokars  JI, Greico  MH, Crawford  JT, Williams  J, Sordillo  EM, An outbreak of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis among hospitalized patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. N Engl J Med. 1992;326:151421.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  3. Beck-Sague  C, Dooley  SW, Hutton  MD, Otten  J, Breeden  A, Crawford  J, Hospital outbreak of multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections: factors in transmission to staff and HIV-infected patients. JAMA. 1992;268:12806. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  4. Bauer  J, Kok-Jensen  A, Faurschou  P, Theusen  J, Taudorf  E, Anderson  AB. A prospective evaluation of the clinical value of nationwide DNA fingerprinting of tuberculosis isolates in Denmark. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2000;4:2959.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  5. Small  PM, Hopewell  PC, Singh  SP, Paz  A, Parsonnet  J, Ruston  DC, The epidemiology of tuberculosis in San Francisco: a population-based study using conventional and molecular methods. N Engl J Med. 1994;330:17039. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  6. Dobbs  KG, Lok  KH, Bruce  F, Mulcahy  D, Benjamin  WH, Dunlap  NE. Value of Mycobacterium tuberculosis fingerprinting as a tool in a rural state surveillance program. Chest. 2001;120:187782. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  7. Chavez  F, Dronda  F, Cave  MD, Alonso-Sanz  M, González-López  A, Eisenach  KD, A longitudinal study of transmission of tuberculosis in a large prison population. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1997;155:71925.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  8. Hanau-Bercot  B, Grémy  I, Raskine  L, Bizet  J, Gutierrez  MC, Boyer-Mariotte  S, A one-year prospective study (1994–1995) for a first evaluation of tuberculosis transmission in French prisons. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2000;4:8539.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  9. Southwick  KL, Hoffmann  K, Ferree  K, Matthews  J, Salfinger  M. Cluster of tuberculosis cases in North Carolina: possible association with atomizer reuse. Am J Infect Control. 2001;29:16. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  10. Michele  TM, Cronin  WA, Graham  NMH, Dwyer  DM, Spies Pope  D, Harrington  N, Transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by a fiberoptic bronchoscope. Identification by DNA fingerprinting. JAMA. 1997;278:10935. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  11. Cronin  W, Rodriguez  E, Valway  S, Bur  S, Hooper  N, Smithwick  R, Pseudo-outbreak of tuberculosis in an acute-care general hospital: epidemiology and clinical implications. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1998;19:73940.
  12. Wurtz  R. Specimen contamination in mycobacteriology laboratory detected by pseudo-outbreak of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: analysis by routine epidemiology and confirmation by molecular technique. J Clin Microbiol. 1996;34:10179.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  13. Braden  CR, Templeton  GL, Stead  WW, Bates  JH, Cave  MD, Valway  S. Retrospective detection of laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis culture with use of DNA fingerprint analysis. Clin Infect Dis. 1997;24:3540.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  14. Sharnprapai  S, Miller  A. Genotyping analyses among foreign-born and U.S.-born persons in Massachusetts. Emerg Infect Dis. 2002;8:123945.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  15. Cowan  LS, Crawford  JT. National tuberculosis genotyping and surveillance network: analysis of the genotype database. Emerg Infect Dis. 2002;8:1294302.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  16. Crawford  JT, Braden  CR, Schable  BA. National tuberculosis genotyping and surveillance network: design and methods. Emerg Infect Dis. 2002;8:11926.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  17. van Embden  JD, Cave  MD, Crawford  JT, Dale  JW, Eisenach  KD, Gicquel  B, Strain identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by DNA fingerprinting: recommendations for a standardized methodology. J Clin Microbiol. 1993;31:4069.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  18. Kamerbeek  J, Schouls  L, Kolk  A, van Agterveld  M, van Soolingen  DS, Bunschoten  A, Simultaneous detection and strain differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis for diagnosis and epidemiology. J Clin Microbiol. 1997;35:90714.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  19. Northrup  J, Miller  AC, Nardell  EA, Sharnprapai  S, Etkind  S, Driscoll  J, Estimated cost of misdiagnosis of tuberculosis resulting from laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis specimens. Emerg Infect Dis. 2002;8:126470.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  20. Bishai  WR, Graham  NM, Harrington  S, Pope  DS, Hooper  N, Astemborski  J, Molecular and geographic patterns of tuberculosis transmission after 15 years of directly observed therapy. JAMA. 1998;280:167984. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  21. Solsona  J, Caylà  JA, Verdú  E, Estrada  MP, Garcia  S, Roca  D, Molecular and conventional epidemiology of tuberculosis in an inner city district. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2000;5:72431.
  22. Onorato  IM. Tuberculosis outbreaks in the United States. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2000;4:1216.
  23. Valway  SE, Sanchez  MP, Shinnick  TF, Orme  I, Agerton  T, Hoy  D, An outbreak involving extensive transmission of a virulent strain of tuberculosis. N Engl J Med. 1998;338:6339. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  24. Sterling  TR, Thompson  D, Stanley  RL, McElroy  PD, Madison  A, Moore  K, A multistate outbreak of TB among members of a highly mobile social network: implications for TB elimination. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2000;4:106673.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  25. Behr  MA, Hopewell  PH, Paz  EA, Kawamura  LM, Schecter  GF, Small  PM. Predictive value of contact investigation for identifying recent transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1998;158:4659.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  26. Dunlap  NE, Harris  RH, Benjamin  WH, Harden  JW, Hafner  D. Laboratory contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cultures. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1995;152:17224.
  27. van Soolingen  D. Molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis and other mycobacterial infections: main methodologies and achievements. J Intern Med. 2001;249:126. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  28. Murray  M. Sampling bias in the molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis. Emerg Infect Dis. 2002;8:3639.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  29. de Boer  AS, Borgdorff  MW, de Haas  PE, Nagelkerke  NJD, van Embden  JDA, van Soolingen  D. Analysis of rate of change of IS6110 RFLP patterns of Mycobacterium tuberculosis based on serial patient isolates. J Infect Dis. 1999;180:123844. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  30. Niemann  S, Rusch-Gerdes  S, Richter  E, Thielen  H, Heykes-Uden  H, Diel  R. Stability of IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism patterns of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains in actual chains of transmission. J Clin Microbiol. 2000;38:25637.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  31. Yeh  RW, Ponce de Leon  A, Agasino  CB, Hahn  JA, Daley  CL, Hopewell  PC, Stability of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA genotypes. J Infect Dis. 1998;177:110711. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  32. Cave  MD, Eisenach  KD, Templeton  G, Salfinger  M, Muzerek  G, Bates  JH, Stability of the DNA fingerprint patterns produced with IS6110 in strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J Clin Microbiol. 1994;32:2626.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  33. Dunlap  NE. The use of RFLP as a tool for tuberculosis control: utility or futility? Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2000;4:1348.

Top

Table

Top

Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid0811.020316

Table of Contents – Volume 8, Number 11—November 2002

EID Search Options
presentation_01 Advanced Article Search – Search articles by author and/or keyword.
presentation_01 Articles by Country Search – Search articles by the topic country.
presentation_01 Article Type Search – Search articles by article type and issue.

Top

Comments

Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:

Sharon Sharnprapai, Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Division of Tuberculosis Prevention and Control, 305 South St., Jamaica Plain, MA 02130, USA; fax: 617-983-6990;

Send To

10000 character(s) remaining.

Top

Page created: July 19, 2010
Page updated: July 19, 2010
Page reviewed: July 19, 2010
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
file_external