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1.
Elife ; 112022 05 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35588296

ABSTRACT

Tuberculosis is a respiratory disease that is treatable with antibiotics. An increasing prevalence of resistance means that to ensure a good treatment outcome it is desirable to test the susceptibility of each infection to different antibiotics. Conventionally, this is done by culturing a clinical sample and then exposing aliquots to a panel of antibiotics, each being present at a pre-determined concentration, thereby determining if the sample isresistant or susceptible to each sample. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of a drug is the lowestconcentration that inhibits growth and is a more useful quantity but requires each sample to be tested at a range ofconcentrations for each drug. Using 96-well broth micro dilution plates with each well containing a lyophilised pre-determined amount of an antibiotic is a convenient and cost-effective way to measure the MICs of several drugs at once for a clinical sample. Although accurate, this is still an expensive and slow process that requires highly-skilled and experienced laboratory scientists. Here we show that, through the BashTheBug project hosted on the Zooniverse citizen science platform, a crowd of volunteers can reproducibly and accurately determine the MICs for 13 drugs and that simply taking the median or mode of 11-17 independent classifications is sufficient. There is therefore a potential role for crowds to support (but not supplant) the role of experts in antibiotic susceptibility testing.


Tuberculosis is a bacterial respiratory infection that kills about 1.4 million people worldwide each year. While antibiotics can cure the condition, the bacterium responsible for this disease, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is developing resistance to these treatments. Choosing which antibiotics to use to treat the infection more carefully may help to combat the growing threat of drug-resistant bacteria. One way to find the best choice is to test how an antibiotic affects the growth of M. tuberculosis in the laboratory. To speed up this process, laboratories test multiple drugs simultaneously. They do this by growing bacteria on plates with 96 wells and injecting individual antibiotics in to each well at different concentrations. The Comprehensive Resistance Prediction for Tuberculosis (CRyPTIC) consortium has used this approach to collect and analyse bacteria from over 20,000 tuberculosis patients. An image of the 96-well plate is then captured and the level of bacterial growth in each well is assessed by laboratory scientists. But this work is difficult, time-consuming, and subjective, even for tuberculosis experts. Here, Fowler et al. show that enlisting citizen scientists may help speed up this process and reduce errors that arise from analysing such a large dataset. In April 2017, Fowler et al. launched the project 'BashTheBug' on the Zooniverse citizen science platform where anyone can access and analyse the images from the CRyPTIC consortium. They found that a crowd of inexperienced volunteers were able to consistently and accurately measure the concentration of antibiotics necessary to inhibit the growth of M. tuberculosis. If the concentration is above a pre-defined threshold, the bacteria are considered to be resistant to the treatment. A consensus result could be reached by calculating the median value of the classifications provided by as few as 17 different BashTheBug participants. The work of BashTheBug volunteers has reduced errors in the CRyPTIC project data, which has been used for several other studies. For instance, the World Health Organization (WHO) has also used the data to create a catalogue of genetic mutations associated with antibiotics resistance in M. tuberculosis. Enlisting citizen scientists has accelerated research on tuberculosis and may help with other pressing public health concerns.


Subject(s)
Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Tuberculosis , Antitubercular Agents/pharmacology , Humans , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Tuberculosis/drug therapy , Volunteers
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(38)2021 09 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34526400

ABSTRACT

How does the public want a COVID-19 vaccine to be allocated? We conducted a conjoint experiment asking 15,536 adults in 13 countries to evaluate 248,576 profiles of potential vaccine recipients who varied randomly on five attributes. Our sample includes diverse countries from all continents. The results suggest that in addition to giving priority to health workers and to those at high risk, the public favors giving priority to a broad range of key workers and to those with lower income. These preferences are similar across respondents of different education levels, incomes, and political ideologies, as well as across most surveyed countries. The public favored COVID-19 vaccines being allocated solely via government programs but were highly polarized in some developed countries on whether taking a vaccine should be mandatory. There is a consensus among the public on many aspects of COVID-19 vaccination, which needs to be taken into account when developing and communicating rollout strategies.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Vaccines/administration & dosage , COVID-19/prevention & control , Public Health , Public Opinion , Vaccination/psychology , Adult , Health Personnel , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 164(12): 1522-1530, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30351270

ABSTRACT

M. tuberculosis grows slowly and is challenging to work with experimentally compared with many other bacteria. Although microtitre plates have the potential to enable high-throughput phenotypic testing of M. tuberculosis, they can be difficult to read and interpret. Here we present a software package, the Automated Mycobacterial Growth Detection Algorithm (AMyGDA), that measures how much M. tuberculosis is growing in each well of a 96-well microtitre plate. The plate used here has serial dilutions of 14 anti-tuberculosis drugs, thereby permitting the MICs to be elucidated. The three participating laboratories each inoculated 38 96-well plates with 15 known M. tuberculosis strains (including the standard H37Rv reference strain) and, after 2 weeks' incubation, measured the MICs for all 14 drugs on each plate and took a photograph. By analysing the images, we demonstrate that AMyGDA is reproducible, and that the MICs measured are comparable to those measured by a laboratory scientist. The AMyGDA software will be used by the Comprehensive Resistance Prediction for Tuberculosis: an International Consortium (CRyPTIC) to measure the drug susceptibility profile of a large number (>30000) of samples of M. tuberculosis from patients over the next few years.


Subject(s)
Antitubercular Agents/pharmacology , Microbial Sensitivity Tests/instrumentation , Microbial Sensitivity Tests/methods , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , Automation, Laboratory , Diagnostic Tests, Routine , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/growth & development , Reproducibility of Results , Software
5.
N Engl J Med ; 379(15): 1403-1415, 2018 10 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30280646

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization recommends drug-susceptibility testing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex for all patients with tuberculosis to guide treatment decisions and improve outcomes. Whether DNA sequencing can be used to accurately predict profiles of susceptibility to first-line antituberculosis drugs has not been clear. METHODS: We obtained whole-genome sequences and associated phenotypes of resistance or susceptibility to the first-line antituberculosis drugs isoniazid, rifampin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide for isolates from 16 countries across six continents. For each isolate, mutations associated with drug resistance and drug susceptibility were identified across nine genes, and individual phenotypes were predicted unless mutations of unknown association were also present. To identify how whole-genome sequencing might direct first-line drug therapy, complete susceptibility profiles were predicted. These profiles were predicted to be susceptible to all four drugs (i.e., pansusceptible) if they were predicted to be susceptible to isoniazid and to the other drugs or if they contained mutations of unknown association in genes that affect susceptibility to the other drugs. We simulated the way in which the negative predictive value changed with the prevalence of drug resistance. RESULTS: A total of 10,209 isolates were analyzed. The largest proportion of phenotypes was predicted for rifampin (9660 [95.4%] of 10,130) and the smallest was predicted for ethambutol (8794 [89.8%] of 9794). Resistance to isoniazid, rifampin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide was correctly predicted with 97.1%, 97.5%, 94.6%, and 91.3% sensitivity, respectively, and susceptibility to these drugs was correctly predicted with 99.0%, 98.8%, 93.6%, and 96.8% specificity. Of the 7516 isolates with complete phenotypic drug-susceptibility profiles, 5865 (78.0%) had complete genotypic predictions, among which 5250 profiles (89.5%) were correctly predicted. Among the 4037 phenotypic profiles that were predicted to be pansusceptible, 3952 (97.9%) were correctly predicted. CONCLUSIONS: Genotypic predictions of the susceptibility of M. tuberculosis to first-line drugs were found to be correlated with phenotypic susceptibility to these drugs. (Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and others.).


Subject(s)
Antitubercular Agents/pharmacology , Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics , Genome, Bacterial , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Tuberculosis/drug therapy , Whole Genome Sequencing , Antitubercular Agents/therapeutic use , Ethambutol/pharmacology , Genotype , Humans , Isoniazid/pharmacology , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Mutation , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/isolation & purification , Phenotype , Pyrazinamide/pharmacology , Rifampin/pharmacology , Tuberculosis/microbiology
6.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29941636

ABSTRACT

The UKMYC5 plate is a 96-well microtiter plate designed by the CRyPTIC Consortium (Comprehensive Resistance Prediction for Tuberculosis: an International Consortium) to enable the measurement of MICs of 14 different antituberculosis (anti-TB) compounds for >30,000 clinical Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates. Unlike the MYCOTB plate, on which the UKMYC5 plate is based, the UKMYC5 plate includes two new (bedaquiline and delamanid) and two repurposed (clofazimine and linezolid) compounds. UKMYC5 plates were tested by seven laboratories on four continents by use of a panel of 19 external quality assessment (EQA) strains, including H37Rv. To assess the optimal combination of reading method and incubation time, MICs were measured from each plate by two readers, using three methods (mirrored box, microscope, and Vizion digital viewing system), after 7, 10, 14, and 21 days of incubation. In addition, all EQA strains were subjected to whole-genome sequencing and phenotypically characterized by the 7H10/7H11 agar proportion method (APM) and by use of MGIT960 mycobacterial growth indicator tubes. We concluded that the UKMYC5 plate is optimally read using the Vizion system after 14 days of incubation, achieving an interreader agreement of 97.9% and intra- and interlaboratory reproducibility rates of 95.6% and 93.1%, respectively. The mirrored box had a similar reproducibility. Strains classified as resistant by APM, MGIT960, or the presence of mutations known to confer resistance consistently showed elevated MICs compared to those for strains classified as susceptible. Finally, the UKMYC5 plate records intermediate MICs for one strain for which the APM measured MICs close to the applied critical concentration, providing early evidence that the UKMYC5 plate can quantitatively measure the magnitude of resistance to anti-TB compounds that is due to specific genetic variation.


Subject(s)
Antitubercular Agents/pharmacology , Diarylquinolines/pharmacology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , Nitroimidazoles/pharmacology , Oxazoles/pharmacology , Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant/drug therapy , Tuberculosis/drug therapy , Clofazimine/pharmacology , Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial/drug effects , Humans , Linezolid/pharmacology , Microbial Sensitivity Tests/methods , Reproducibility of Results
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