TB Research

Persistent <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> bioaerosol release in a tuberculosis-endemic setting

Dinkele R, Gessner S, Patterson B, McKerry A, Hoosen Z, Vazi A, Seldon R, Koch A, et al. (10 authors)

iScience · 2024-08

Abstract

Pioneering studies linking symptomatic disease and cough-mediated Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mtb ) release established the infectious origin of tuberculosis (TB), simultaneously informing the notion that pathology is a prerequisite for Mtb transmission. Our recent work has challenged this assumption: by sampling TB clinic attendees, we detected equivalent release of Mtb -containing bioaerosols by confirmed TB patients and individuals not receiving a TB diagnosis and observed time-dependent reduction in Mtb bioaerosol positivity during 6-month follow-up of both cohorts, irrespective of anti-TB chemotherapy. Now, we report widespread Mtb release in our TB-endemic setting: of 89 randomly recruited community members, 79.8% (71/89) produced Mtb- containing bioaerosols independently of QuantiFERON status, a standard test for Mtb exposure. Moreover, during 2-month longitudinal sampling, only 2% (1/50) were serially Mtb bioaerosol negative. These results necessitate a reframing of the prevailing paradigm of Mtb transmission and TB etiology, perhaps explaining the historical inability to elucidate Mtb transmission networks in TB-endemic regions.