Volume 26, Number 5—May 2020
Research
Possible Transmission Mechanisms of Mixed Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection in High HIV Prevalence Country, Botswana
Table 1
Characteristic | HIV status |
||
---|---|---|---|
Positive | Negative | Unknown | |
Total, no. (%), N = 2,137 | 1,130 (53) | 948 (44) | 59 (3) |
Age, y, mean (± SD) |
36.9 (10) |
32.5 (16) |
33.5 (14) |
Sex, no. (%) | |||
M | 558 (49) | 584 (62) | 43 (73) |
F |
572 (51) |
364 (38) |
16 (27) |
Primary residential site, no. (%) | |||
Gaborone | 828 (73) | 565 (60) | 43 (73) |
Ghanzi District | 109 (10) | 215 (23) | 8 (14) |
Other Botswana, not in study region | 116 (10) | 108 (11) | 0 |
Missing residential address |
77 (7) |
60 (6) |
8 (14) |
Previous tuberculosis history, no. (%) | |||
Yes | 227 (20) | 150 (16) | 11 (19) |
No |
903 (80) |
798 (84) |
48 (81) |
Infection status, no. (%)* | |||
Mixed | 17 (2) | 15 (2) | 2 (4) |
Possible mixed | 50 (5) | 35 (4) | 3 (5) |
Single |
1,008 (93) |
869 (94) |
52 (91) |
Different strains, no. (%)† | 570 (66) | 453 (53) | 50 (6) |
*After excluding 86 patients with mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit–variable-number tandem-repeat results with missing alleles.
†Total number of different mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit–variable-number tandem-repeat results = 862.
1Current affiliation: Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
2These senior authors contributed equally to this article.
Page created: April 16, 2020
Page updated: April 16, 2020
Page reviewed: April 16, 2020
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