INTRODUCTION
Cholera is an acute intestinal infection caused by ingestion of food or water contaminated with Vibrio cholerae O1 [1]. Since 1817, seven cholera pandemics have been reported. The seventh pandemic that began in 1961 was caused by the Vibrio cholerae O1 (VCO1) El Tor biotype. However, new variants of VCO1 El Tor have been discovered since the early 1990s. They express a more virulent form of the classical cholera toxin and are associated with higher case-fatality ratios [Reference Okada2, Reference Safa, Nair and Kong3]. Many studies have suggested that these El Tor variants have replaced the prototypic El Tor strains in Asian and African countries such as Bangladesh and India [Reference Raychoudhuri4, Reference Morita5]. Modern control and prevention methods can be effective against cholera in developed countries, but the lack of clean water sources and appropriate sanitation in developing countries makes control difficult. Global travel also contributes to the spread of cholera, causing it to remain a major public health concern.
In 2010, cases from 14 Asian countries accounted for 4·3% of the reported global incidence of cholera, an increase of 50% compared to 2009 [6]. The Greater Mekong area was a hotspot, with 3405 cases found in Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. Of these, 606 cases were reported in Vietnam. From 2005 to 2009, cholera appeared only in northern Vietnam where a large outbreak occurred during 2007–2008 [7]. One patient moved from northern Vietnam in 2008 and caused one sporadic case in southern Vietnam (L.T.P.N., unpublished information). However, at the beginning of 2010, cholera became established in the An Giang province of southern Vietnam, from which it spread and lasted until the end of the year. During this period, there were only sporadic cases in northern Vietnam.
Several molecular methods are used in the identification and spread of epidemiologically linked bacterial strains, of which, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis and multilocus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis (MLVA) are common due to their high discriminatory power. We performed these techniques to investigate the relationship between the VCO1 isolates from southern Vietnam in 2010 compared to isolates from previous years.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains
Our study examined VCO1 isolates from the 2010 southern Vietnam outbreak (Table 1). For comparison, we also examined isolates from northern Vietnam in 2008, and from the 1999–2004 outbreaks in southern Vietnam. They were isolated at provincial institutes (preventive medicine centres) or hospitals and collected by the Pasteur Institute, Ho Chi Minh City, the regional central institute in southern Vietnam.
Numbers in parentheses indicate those of environmental isolates.
Numbers in square brackets indicate those from imported cases.
PFGE
We performed PFGE as described by the PulseNet protocol for subtyping V. cholerae [Reference Cooper8]. The bacterial DNA embedded in each plug was digested with 20 U NotI (Promega, USA) restriction enzyme at 37 °C overnight. Restriction fragments were separated in the CHEF DR-III system (Bio-Rad Laboratories, USA) at 6 V/cm using switch times of 2–10 s for 13 h, and 20–25 s for 6 h. The representative PFGE patterns were analysed using BioNumerics software (Applied Maths, Belgium) utilizing the Dice coefficient and UPGMA (unweighted pair-group method using arithmetic averages) clustering. A band position tolerance of 1·0 was applied for clustering analysis.
MLVA
The MLVA of the cholera isolates was performed using seven previously described loci [Reference Danin-Poleg9]. Five of the loci (1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 corresponding to VC0147, VC0436-7, VC0500, VC1457, and VC1650, respectively) were on the large chromosome, and two (7 and 8 corresponding to VCA0171 and VCA0283, respectively) were on the small chromosome. The details for the loci and the PCR primers used to amplify them have been published previously [6]. Total DNA was extracted from fresh colonies by boiling the sample for 10 min, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed as follows: initial denaturation at 95 °C for 15 min; 35 cycles of 95 °C for 20 s, 60 °C for 90 s, and 72 °C for 60 s; with a final extension at 72 °C for 10 min. The PCR products were separated utilizing an ABI 3130 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems, USA), and the sizes were determined with GeneMapper software v. 4.1 (Applied Biosystems, USA) and converted to the repeat copy number; the null allele was designated −2 [Reference Hyytiä-Trees10]. The repeat copy numbers were analysed using a categorical multi-state coefficient and UPGMA clustering with BioNumerics software to create a minimum spanning tree of MLVA.
RESULTS
In 2010, 174 culture-positive cases were identified at preventive medicine centres of 10 provinces from January to December with peaks in June and July (n = 72 and n = 42, respectively) (Table 1, Fig. 1 a). The provinces involved were Ben Tre (n = 71), An Giang (n = 41), Ca Mau (n = 26), Ho Chi Minh City (n = 13), Can Tho (n = 10), Tay Ninh (n = 4), Binh Phuoc (n = 4), Bac Lieu (n = 2), Dong Nai (n = 2), and Tien Giang (n = 1), where Binh Phuoc had only imported patients. Distribution of cases is shown in Figure 1 b. Of the 174 cases, 150 were classified as locally acquired, 16 were imported cases (from Cambodia), and eight were asymptomatic cases. Sixty-one isolates used in this study comprised of 41 isolates from 2010 and 20 isolates from 1999 to 2008 were identified as atypical El Tor, the El Tor biotype carrying the classical ctxB allele encoding the B subunit of cholera toxin (L.T.P.N., unpublished observations). Forty-one isolates from the 2010 patients represented those from the 10 provinces including seven imported cases (Table 1). Fifty-seven of the isolates were analysed by PFGE (four isolates failed the analysis), and seven patterns were identified (Table 2). A clustering analysis showed that PFGE patterns had >85% similarity to each other (Fig. 2). The 2008 and 2010 isolates displayed the P1, P2, and P3 banding patterns. The 2001–2004 isolates displayed the P4–P6 banding patterns, and the isolates from 1999 showed the P7 pattern. P1–P3, P4–P6, and P7 made sub-clusters, respectively.
NA, Not analysed; MLVA, multilocus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis; PFGE, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis.
* Subtotal numbers for each group are indicated.
MLVA was successfully conducted on the 61 isolates. Twenty-seven types (V01–V27) were identified that clustered into three groups (Table 2 and Fig. 3). Group 1 was from 2008 to 2010 and consisted of 43 isolates distributed among 14 types (V01–V14). Group 2 derived from 2001 to 2004 and consisted of 15 isolates distributed among 10 types (V15–V24), and group 3 was from 1999 and consisted of three isolates with three different types (V25–V27). The MLVA group 1 differed from groups 2 and 3 by ⩾3 loci.
DISCUSSION
In 2010, there was a cholera outbreak in southern Vietnam which involved 174 patients. We conducted two kinds of molecular epidemiological analyses, PFGE analysis and MLVA to uncover the genetic relationships between the isolates and also with previous endemic strains. PFGE analysis identified three patterns (P1–P3) in the isolates from 2010 (Fig. 2). According to epidemiological data, the initial domestic cases of the 2010 cholera outbreak were identified in An Giang province, which borders Cambodia (Table 1) where pattern P1 was identified. Pattern P2 accounted for the majority in this study (Table 2). These include the isolates from domestic outbreaks in nine provinces in southern Vietnam, the two isolates from imported cases, and two isolates from environmental water samples. The two additional isolates originating from northern Vietnam in 2008 also had the P2 pattern (Fig. 2). Patterns P1–P3 were quite similar to each other, but differentiated from the P4–P6 isolates of 2001–2004 or P7 isolates of 1999 according to a clustering analysis (Fig. 2), suggesting isolates in 2008–2010 were a different clone from those previously. Further, the PFGE patterns could also be regarded as similar to what had been described previously for isolates from many other countries, including Thailand and Laos in 2007 [Reference Ngo11, Reference Ang12], northern Vietnam in 2007–2008 [Reference Okada13], and Malaysia in 2009 [Reference Sithivong14].
MLVA could differentiate isolates better than PFGE analysis, and identified 27 types in total. Thirteen types (V01–13) were identified in the isolates from 2010 (Table 2, Fig. 3). The MLVA profiles suggested that the 2010 isolates had a close genetic relationship to each other. One MLVA type (V01; VC-1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, and 8 of 10, 6, −2, 4, 7, 17, and 17, respectively) was dominant throughout the year and was observed for 24 of the 41 isolates from 2010, including four isolates from imported cases. MLVA is known to have high discriminatory power and is useful for tracing the source and/or transmission of infection in an outbreak [Reference Ali15]. It is likely that the other 12 variants were created during dissemination that year, although more extensive study with epidemiological data would be needed to confirm this.
The two isolates from 2008 displayed V14 in MLVA. V14 was a double locus variant for V01 as well as V03 (Fig. 3). Isolates from 1999 and 2001–2004 also displayed multiple types but were clustered in different groups (groups 3 and 2, respectively) than those from 2008–2010 (group 1) with ⩾3 loci difference from group 1 isolates (Fig. 3). There seemed to be correlations between the results of PFGE and MLVA analyses (Table 2). The group 1, 2, and 3 isolates showed PFGE patterns P1–P3, P4–P6, and P7, respectively, which consisted of different PFGE sub-clusters (Fig. 2). The MLVA results could therefore strengthen the results of PFGE analysis and suggest that isolates in group 1 could be derived from a unique clone.
The majority of isolates from 2010 had MLVA profiles for the VC-1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, and 8 loci of 10, 6, 4/-2, 4/-2, 7, x, and x, respectively, with the variations of VC-7 and VC-8 abbreviated as ‘x’ due to their high variability [Reference Choi16]. The profiles of 10, 6, NA, NA, x, x were identified in previous studies where the information on VC-3 and −5 loci were not available (NA) [Reference Okada2, Reference Choi16]. Most of the profiles of group 1 in this study shared common profiles with those from northern Vietnam in 2008 (10, 6, NA, NA, 7, 17, 19) [Reference Choi16] and from Thailand in 2009–2010 (10, 6, NA, NA, 7, 17/18, 17/18) [Reference Okada2] (Fig. 3).
In this study, PFGE analysis and MLVA identified seven patterns and 27 types, respectively. Both techniques indicated that the strains in 2008 and 2010 differed from those in 1999–2004, and that they shared common features with strains of other Southeast Asian countries in recent years. This implies that the outbreak in southern Vietnam in 2010 is likely to be part of large epidemic which at least covered the 2008–2010 outbreaks in this region. MLVA revealed a variety of variants which could be created during the spread of cholera. The countries in the Greater Mekong area are linked to each other geographically and economically. Extensive molecular epidemiological analyses would be expected to reveal additional clusters of cholera isolates in these areas, and also identify linkages between clusters. Such linkages can be useful for tracing common sources of contamination which leads to reducing the transmission of cholera. It would be significant for the control of epidemic of cholera to identify genetically related clusters with molecular epidemiological analyses, and to combine the results with epidemiological information in a timely manner.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank Ms. N. Takai and Ms J. Lee for their technical assistance. This study was partially supported by Grants-in-aid from the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan (H23-Shinko-Shitei-020, H27-Shokuhin-Ippan-007, H24-Shinko-Ippan-005, H25-Shokuhin-Ippan-014, H26-Shinkojituyoka-Ippan-011, H27-Shinkogyosei-Ippan-002); the Ministry of the Environment of Japan (Global Environment Research Fund, S-8); and Vietnam Research Station, Nagasaki University, Japan Initiative for Global Research Network on Infectious Diseases (J-GRID).
DECLARATION OF INTEREST
None.