Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-skm99 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T22:39:23.592Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Enhanced melioidosis surveillance in patients attending four tertiary hospitals in Yangon, Myanmar

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 June 2021

Mo Mo Win
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Research, Yangon, Myanmar
Kyi Kyi Nyein Win
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Research, Yangon, Myanmar
Thin Thin Wah
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Research, Yangon, Myanmar
Su Nyein Aye
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Research, Yangon, Myanmar
Tin Tin Htwe
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Research, Yangon, Myanmar
Khwar Nyo Zin
Affiliation:
Yangon General Hospital, Yangon, Myanmar
Myint Thazin Aung
Affiliation:
North Okklapa General Hospital, Yangon, Myanmar
Wah Wah Aung
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Research, Yangon, Myanmar
Elizabeth A. Ashley
Affiliation:
Myanmar-Oxford Clinical Research Unit, Yangon, Myanmar Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Frank Smithuis
Affiliation:
Myanmar-Oxford Clinical Research Unit, Yangon, Myanmar Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Vanessa Rigas
Affiliation:
Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Bart J. Currie
Affiliation:
Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Mark Mayo
Affiliation:
Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Jessica R. Webb
Affiliation:
Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Clare L. Ling
Affiliation:
Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK Shoklo Malaria Research Unit, Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Maesot, Thailand
Zaw Than Htun
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Research, Yangon, Myanmar
David A.B. Dance*
Affiliation:
Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK Lao-Oxford-Mahosot Hospital-Wellcome Trust Research Unit, Vientiane, Lao PDR Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
*
Author for correspondence: David A.B. Dance, E-mail: david.d@tropmedres.ac
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

To investigate the current epidemiology of melioidosis in Yangon, Myanmar, between June 2017 and May 2019 we conducted enhanced surveillance for melioidosis in four tertiary hospitals in Yangon, where the disease was first discovered in 1911. Oxidase-positive Gram-negative rods were obtained from the microbiology laboratories and further analysed at the Department of Medical Research. Analysis included culture on Ashdown agar, the three disc sensitivity test (gentamicin, colistin and co-amoxiclav), latex agglutination, API 20 NE, antibiotic susceptibility testing, and a subset underwent molecular confirmation with a Burkholderia pseudomallei specific assay. Twenty one of 364 isolates (5.7%) were confirmed as B. pseudomallei and were mostly susceptible to the antibiotics used in standard therapy for melioidosis. Ten patients were from Yangon Region, nine were from Ayeyarwaddy region, and one each was from Kayin and Rakhine States. A history of soil contact was given by seven patients, five had diabetes mellitus and one had renal insufficiency. The patients presented with septicaemia (12 cases), pneumonia (three cases), urinary tract infection (two cases) and wound infection (four cases). Eighteen patients survived to hospital discharge. This study highlights the likelihood that melioidosis may be far more common, but underdiagnosed, in more rural parts of Myanmar as in other countries in SE Asia.

Type
Original Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Burkholderia pseudomallei is a motile, oxidase-positive, Gram-negative, non-fermentative bacillus which causes melioidosis, a glanders-like disease of both humans and animals. It was first described in Myanmar by Whitmore and Krishnaswami in 1911 in a 40-year-old morphine addict who died from acute fulminating pneumonia with superficial abscesses of the leg [Reference Whitmore and Krishnaswami1, Reference Whitmore2]. The disease is now known to be relatively common in parts of South East Asia and Northern Australia, but a recent modelling study suggested that it may still be far commoner than is currently appreciated, with the model estimating some 165 000 cases and 89 000 deaths worldwide each year [Reference Limmathurotsakul3]. The clinical manifestations of melioidosis are extremely varied, including multisystem involvement with deep visceral abscesses, especially in the liver and spleen, pustular necrotic skin or subcutaneous lesions, pyrexia of unknown origin, septicaemia, central nervous system infections, head and neck infections including parotid abscesses, especially in children and pulmonary infections resembling tuberculosis or pneumonia. Severe melioidosis has a high mortality, which may exceed 70% if patients are not treated appropriately and if ICU facilities are lacking [Reference Limmathurotsakul3, Reference Pitman4].

Burkholderia pseudomallei is an environmental saprophyte found in the tropics and in endemic areas is readily isolated from mud and surface water, particularly rice paddy [Reference Limmathurotsakul3]. It can be acquired through inoculation, inhalation or ingestion of soil or water. People engaged in occupations such as farming or gardening in endemic environments have an increased risk of acquiring melioidosis. In endemic areas, approximately 5–30% of healthy adults have evidence of exposure to B. pseudomallei, with indirect haemagglutination antibody titres of 1:40 or higher [Reference Kanaphun5, Reference Supputtamongkol6]. In addition, people with diabetes mellitus are at greater risk of developing melioidosis, which may lead to the disease becoming more common as the prevalence of diabetes increases in a population [Reference Limmathurotsakul3].

Since the early descriptions of B. pseudomallei, when it was said to account for one in every 20 autopsies carried out in Yangon General Hospital [Reference Krishnaswamy7], melioidosis has been reported rarely in Myanmar. This is probably because it is difficult to diagnose clinically, necessitating microbiological confirmation. Relatively few clinicians and microbiologists are familiar with the disease and its causative organism, which may be discarded as a contaminant, so it frequently goes un- or misdiagnosed [Reference Limmathurotsakul3]. Recently, however, awareness has been increasing and there have been a number of case-reports from the Yangon area over the past 17 years [Reference Aung8Reference Aung and Mar13]. The recent modelling study predicted that more than 6200 cases and 3600 deaths due to melioidosis may occur each year in Myanmar [Reference Limmathurotsakul3], so it is likely that many more cases are still undiagnosed. Many patients may thus be dying unnecessarily because they do not receive appropriate diagnosis and treatment. We therefore undertook a prospective study using simple methods to identify cases of melioidosis in four general hospitals in and around Yangon.

Methods

Study sites

We selected four hospitals in Yangon for the study based on their catchment areas (in order to give broad geographical coverage of Yangon) and the presence of in-house microbiology laboratories: Yangon General Hospital (YGH; 2000-bedded hospital located in the centre of Yangon), Thigangyun General Hospital (TGH; 500-bedded hospital located in the eastern part of Yangon), Insein General Hospital (IGH; 500-bedded hospital located in the northern part of Yangon) and North Okklapa General Hospital (NOGH; 800-bedded hospital located in the eastern part of Yangon). The study period was from June 2017 to May 2019.

Clinical case detection

At the start of the study, physicians from the study sites were provided with information about the clinical features, diagnosis and management of melioidosis through oral presentations in order to raise their awareness of the disease. When isolates were confirmed as B. pseudomallei, either by the hospital laboratories or by the Department of Medical Research, Yangon (DMR), the responsible physicians were informed so that patients received the appropriate management for melioidosis. Patients' hospital charts were reviewed for basic socio-demographic and clinical data, including any history of a known exposure event and underlying diseases, which were recorded on a standard proforma (Supplementary material 1).

Hospital microbiological investigations

Prior to the start of sample collection, meetings were held with the microbiologists from the study hospitals' laboratories to alert them to the study and to highlight the key features of B. pseudomallei. Clinical samples were processed according to the normal procedures in the laboratories concerned. Organisms isolated from blood cultures, or in pure or predominant culture from body fluids, pus, sputum or urine, were tested by Gram stain and oxidase test. Isolates suspected of being B. pseudomallei (oxidase-positive Gram-negative bacilli that were not obviously Pseudomonas aeruginosa based on the presence of green pigment and a typical smell) were stored on nutrient agar slants. These were collected weekly from the microbiology laboratories, along with clinical data proformas, and analysed further at DMR.

Processing of samples at DMR

The isolates were sub-cultured from the nutrient agar slants onto Ashdown's selective agar and blood agar, incubated at 35–37 °C for 24–96 h aerobically and examined daily. Gram staining and oxidase tests were performed on all isolates. Oxidase-positive Gram-negative rods which grew on Ashdown's agar were screened by disc diffusion for resistance to gentamicin (10 μg) and colistin (10 μg) and susceptibility to co-amoxiclav (20 + 10 μg), and tested by latex agglutination for presumptive identification of B. pseudomallei according to the Standard Operating Procedures developed by Wellcome Trust Mahidol University Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Programme [14]. Finally, the identity of isolates that were consistent with B. pseudomallei by the screening tests was confirmed by API 20 NE (BioMérieux UK Ltd, Basingstoke, UK). All laboratory procedures at DMR were performed in a Class II Biological Safety Cabinet. The study was assessed against the ‘Microbiology Investigation Criteria for Reporting Objectively (MICRO)’ criteria [Reference Turner15] and complied with the majority of the criteria (Supplementary Table T1).

Antibiotic susceptibility testing

Isolates that were B. pseudomallei latex agglutination positive were tested at DMR for their susceptibility by disc diffusion to ceftazidime (30 μg), meropenem (10 μg), chloramphenicol (30 μg), doxycycline (30 μg), co-amoxiclav and co-trimoxazole (25 μg) using a modification of the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) method developed by the Wellcome Trust Mahidol University Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Programme [14] since this study ante-dated the publication of the EUCAST method [Reference Dance16]. Isolates that appeared resistant on initial testing in Yangon were later re-tested using fresh batches of antibiotic discs and were regarded as susceptible if the second tests classified them as such. Seven isolates were also tested against the relevant antibiotics by gradient diffusion (ETEST® BioMérieux) at Menzies School of Health Research, Darwin, Australia, with isolates classified as susceptible or resistant in accordance with the CLSI MIC guidelines 2017 [17].

Molecular testing

The identities of the first nine latex agglutination positive isolates were confirmed using a B. pseudomallei specific real-time PCR assay targeting a 115-bp segment within the Type III Secretion System at the Shoklo Malaria Research Unit, Thailand [Reference Novak18, Reference Knappik19]. The nine clinical isolates and seven soil isolates from Myanmar (two from Magway region, four from Bago region and one from Mon state) were also analysed at Menzies School of Health Research, Darwin, Australia using BOX-PCR [Reference Currie20] and whole genome sequencing (the results of which are reported elsewhere) [Reference Webb21].

Ethical considerations

Ethical approval was obtained from the Ethics Review Committee of the Department of Medical Research on 16 June 2017 for the study Detection of Burkholderia pseudomallei in patients attending Yangon, Thingangyun, Insein and North Okkalapa General Hospitals (2017) (approval number DMR/2017/081).

Results

Twenty-one of 364 oxidase-positive Gram-negative rod isolates (5.7%) from 21 individual patients were identified as B. pseudomallei. Basic clinical and demographic data for these patients are shown in Table 1. Twelve were male, with a median age of 55 years (range 18–79), and nine were female, with a median age of 51 years (range 21–61). Nineteen patients were diagnosed at YGH, one each from IGH and NOGH and none at TGH. Ten patients were from Yangon Region, nine were from Ayeyarwaddy Region, and one patient each was from Kayin and Rahkine States (Fig. 1).

Table 1. Clinical and demographic data for 21 patients with culture-confirmed melioidosis

Abbreviations:

YGH = Yangon General Hospital, IGH = Insein General Hospital, NOGH = North Okklapa General Hospital.

Fig. 1. Map showing townships of residence of 21 melioidosis patients. Source :https://images.app.goo.gl/MRMRp1xtJcXbghx46.

Of the 21 patients, a history of soil contact was given by seven, five were reported as having diabetes mellitus and one was reported as having renal insufficiency. The patients presented with septicaemia (12 patients), pneumonia (three patients), urinary tract infection (two patients) and wound infection (four patients). Among the septicaemic patients, two died and one was taken home from hospital in a severe condition and was not expected to survive, but the remaining 18 patients all recovered and were subsequently discharged (Table 1).

All nine isolates tested by B. pseudomallei specific PCR were confirmed as B. pseudomallei. BOX typing of seven of nine clinical strains demonstrated diversity, with multiple BOX patterns observed (Figure S1). Furthermore, the BOX patterns of the clinical strains did not match the BOX patterns of any of seven Myanmar environmental strains tested simultaneously, demonstrating no link between the environmental and patient strains, which aligns with the epidemiological data (Figure S1).

Following repeat testing where appropriate, testing of the 21 B. pseudomallei isolates by disc diffusion in Yangon found one to have intermediate susceptibility to chloramphenicol and one intermediate susceptibility to ceftazidime. Testing of the first seven isolates against selected antibiotics by gradient diffusion in Darwin did not confirm any of the resistances that had been suspected following initial tests in Yangon (Table S2).

Discussion

Melioidosis is a potentially fatal disease caused by B. pseudomallei, which requires specific and prolonged antibiotic treatment to prevent death and relapse. The infection has been recognised increasingly throughout the tropics over the past 40 years, although underdiagnosis remains a significant problem due to a lack of clinical awareness, a lack of familiarity with the organism amongst laboratory staff and the under-development of diagnostic services serving the poor rural population most likely to be affected [Reference Limmathurotsakul3]. The sensitivity of culture for B. pseudomallei from clinical specimens can be improved with the use of selective media [Reference Dance22]. However, even with positive cultures, the organism is frequently misidentified or disregarded as a contaminant [Reference Greer23]. Although not officially recognised as a ‘Neglected Tropical Disease’ (NTD), it has been estimated that melioidosis may cause a greater burden of disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) than many recognised NTDs such as dengue, schistosomiasis and leishmaniasis [Reference Birnie24]. Even in countries where its importance has been highlighted by researchers, such as Thailand, official statistics have failed to capture the true disease burden, especially in terms of mortality [Reference Hantrakun25].

Myanmar has a special place in the history of melioidosis, as it is where the disease was first recognised by Alfred Whitmore and CS Krishnaswami working in Rangoon in 1911 [Reference Whitmore and Krishnaswami1, Reference Whitmore2]. However, apart from a single case report in 1948 [Reference Sen26], the disease ‘disappeared’ from the Myanmar medical literature until the beginning of the 21st century [Reference Aung8] and since then only a handful of cases has been reported [Reference Win27]. We therefore undertook this study in four tertiary hospitals in Yangon, including that in which melioidosis had first been identified, in order better to understand the true incidence of meliodosis in modern day Yangon. We attempted to improve the awareness of the disease amongst clinicians and laboratory staff in the respective hospitals prior to the study in order to encourage submission of relevant diagnostic specimens to their laboratories, and to overcome the difficulties in the identification of B. pseudomallei by collecting all oxidase-positive Gram-negative bacilli for identification in a central laboratory.

Despite this, we only identified 21 B. pseudomallei out of 364 isolates tested (5.7%) over a 2-year period. It is notable that all but two of these were detected at YGH, the largest hospital with the most complex casemix and one of only two of the hospitals in the study with automated systems for blood cultures and bacterial identification. B. pseudomallei had, however, previously been reported to account for only one of 90 episodes of bacteraemia in YGH in a one year period between 2015 and 2016 [Reference Myat28]. In another study reported in 2013, only three B. pseudomallei isolates were obtained from 85 pus and wound swab samples (3.5%) in YGH [Reference Htun12]. Overall, the incidence of confirmed melioidosis in Yangon was not high compared with parts of neighbouring endemic countries such as Thailand, Cambodia and Laos [Reference Dance29Reference Bory31]. It thus appears that melioidosis may not now be as common in Yangon as it was in the time of Krishnaswamy, who in 1917 reported seeing more than 200 cases over 6 years in the mortuary of YGH, accounting for one in every 20 autopsies he performed [Reference Krishnaswamy7]. There are several possible explanations for this, most notably the fact that all four hospitals were within the city of Yangon, which is considerably more urbanised now than it was in the early part of the 20th century, when there were still paddy fields in what is now the centre of a city with over 5 million inhabitants.

In terms of the clinical and epidemiological features of the 21 patients in our series, there appears to be nothing particularly unusual about melioidosis in modern day Myanmar to distinguish it from other parts of south east Asia [Reference Dance29Reference Bory31], apart from the relatively low mortality [3 of 21 (14%) patients], which suggests that some more severe cases may have been being missed. Unfortunately, we do not have any follow-up data and so cannot be certain whether any patients died or relapsed following hospital discharge. It is worthy of note that only 33.3% of our patients reported an occupation in agriculture, although most of the patients resided in Ayeyarwaddy and outskirts of Yangon (nine and ten cases, respectively), where a high proportion of the population are involved in farming. Even if patients do not report their occupation as ‘farmer’, many families have some land and engage in agricultural activities such as rice farming some of the time. Diabetes was a common predisposing factor, reported in five of our patients, although this may have been under-recognised or under-reported. The prevalence of diabetes mellitus, the major risk factor for melioidosis, is rapidly increasing in Myanmar [Reference Latt32]. There were also no patients who were injecting drug users in our series, whereas the majority (31/38) of the original melioidosis cases described by Whitmore and Krishnaswami, and 95% of those later reported by Krishnaswamy, showed evidence of being morphia injectors leading to the nickname ‘morphia injector's septicaemia’ [Reference Whitmore2, Reference Krishnaswamy7]. Although occasional reports of melioidosis in injecting drug users have appeared subsequently [Reference Doker33], this has not featured as a major risk factor for the disease since the early reports from Myanmar. The reason for this particular historic association remains as yet unexplained, although it is likely that it is accounted for by specific behavioural or environmental factors amongst morphine injectors in early 20th century Yangon and possibly the more intensive microbiological investigation of patients who underwent post mortem examination as ‘police cases’. Interestingly, there is speculation that some of the more recent unexplained autochthonous cases of melioidosis seen in the USA may be the result of potential contamination of medical commodities, including intravenous products, imported from Southeast Asia [Reference Stewart34].

As far as the microbiology of melioidosis in Myanmar is concerned, again the isolates of B. pseudomallei appeared relatively typical for the species. On the basis of disc diffusion testing carried out in Yangon, it initially appeared that there was more resistance to antibiotics usually used to treat melioidosis, particularly beta-lactams, than would generally be expected in B. pseudomallei (data not shown). The prolonged antibiotic regimens used in melioidosis can lead to B. pseudomallei acquiring resistance, although the frequency of co-trimoxazole resistance in B. pseudomallei has previously been over-estimated by disc diffusion testing [Reference Dance35]. Ceftazidime resistance has been widely reported in patients following treatment but is not common [Reference Wuthiekanun36], and meropenem resistance is exceedingly rare. On re-testing in Yangon, however, the majority of these initial results could not be confirmed and they were assumed to be related to a loss of disc potency on the initial testing. In addition, none of these initial results could be confirmed when seven isolates were re-tested in Darwin by the gradient strip method. Molecular characterisation of nine of the isolates from our study is reported in detail elsewhere [Reference Webb21]. However, in summary, phylogenomic analysis of B. pseudomallei genomes from Myanmar in the context of a global set of B. pseudomallei genomes demonstrated that Myanmar B. pseudomallei reside within the Asian clade and cluster with genomes from countries bordered by the Mekong River. Noteworthy is that Myanmar B. pseudomallei isolates are very diverse with numerous sequence types (STs) detected, and our BOX-PCR results align with the noted high diversity [Reference Currie20, Reference Webb21] (Figure S1).

The main limitation of our study is that it is likely that our enhanced laboratory-based surveillance will still have missed patients with melioidosis. Patients with fevers, pneumonia and abscesses are not always investigated intensively for melioidosis in Myanmar, and selective media such as Ashdown's agar, which are known to increase the yield of culture for B. pseudomallei from sites with a normal flora, were not used for primary isolation in this study because of resource constraints [Reference Dance22]. In addition, by restricting our surveillance to hospital laboratories and not including private laboratories, even culture-positive cases admitted to the four hospitals during the study may have been missed. This is because microbiology services in Myanmar are fragmented and hospital laboratories are currently only open during standard hours of work (8:00 AM to 5:00 PM). Samples collected outside these hours are usually sent to private laboratories and clinicians may also opt to send samples to private laboratories at other times. We are aware of at least two patients with culture-positive melioidosis at IGH who were diagnosed by private laboratories during our study period but were missed by our surveillance for this reason, and it is likely that similar instances occurred at the other hospitals.

Overall, it is clear that melioidosis is still endemic in Yangon and neighbouring provinces, although considerable further work will be needed to establish the true disease burden. Furthermore, it is likely that there will be areas of much higher incidence outside Yangon. For example, melioidosis is relatively uncommon in hospitals in Bangkok compared with hospitals in northeast Thailand where it is a major cause of community-acquired sepsis [Reference Hinjoy30]: similar hotspots may well exist in rural Myanmar. Further studies are therefore necessary to determine the true distribution of B. pseudomallei and incidence of melioidosis at selected locations in Myanmar. Since rice farming is a frequent activity in suburban and rural areas in Myanmar, it is on such populations that efforts should initially be focused. Further work is also needed at a national level to raise awareness of the disease amongst clinicians and laboratory staff to enable patients to be effectively diagnosed and appropriately treated.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S095026882100128X.

Data

The data that support the findings of this study are available from Dr Mo Mo Win on request.

Acknowledgements

We thank Ms Premjit Amornchai for help training staff in laboratory procedures and for the support of Dr Direk Limmathurotsakul. We are grateful to Ms.Wiphada Sripongsut Srinark from Shoklo Malaria Research Unit, Maesot and staff from Menzies School of Health, Darwin for kindly helping with the real-time PCR and BOX-PCR assays. Our thanks also goes to DrNay Myo Aung, Lecturer, Department of Medicine, University of Medicine (2) for alerting us to additional cases in Insein General Hospital.

Financial support

This study was conducted with the funding from Department of Medical Research, Ministry of Health and Sports, Myanmar (grant numbers PRC/009/17 and PRC/001/19). In addition, the study was funded in part by the Wellcome Trust [Grant number 106698/Z/14/Z]. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.

Conflict of interest

None.

References

Whitmore, A and Krishnaswami, CS (1912) An account of the discovery of a hitherto undescribed infective disease occurring among the population of Rangoon. Indian Medical Gazette 47, 262267.Google Scholar
Whitmore, A (1913) An account of a glanders-like disease occurring in Rangoon. Journal of Hygiene 13, 134.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Limmathurotsakul, D et al. (2016) Predicted global distribution of Burkholderia pseudomallei and burden of melioidosis. Nature Microbiology 1, 213.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pitman, MC et al. (2015) Intravenous therapy duration and outcomes in melioidosis: a new treatment paradigm. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 9, 116.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kanaphun, P et al. (1991) Serology and carriage of Pseudomonas pseudomallei: a prospective study in 1000 hospitalized children in Northeast Thailand. Journal of Infectious Diseases 167, 230233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Supputtamongkol, Y et al. (1994) The epidemiology of melioidosis in Ubon Ratchatani, Northeast Thailand. International Journal of Epidemiology 23, 10821090.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krishnaswamy, CS (1917) Morphia injector's septicaemia. Indian Medical Gazette 52, 296299.Google Scholar
Aung, MK (2000) Melioidosis: a hidden disease in Myanmar. Myanmar Journal of Current Medical Practice 5, 5759.Google Scholar
Win, MM Isolation of Peudomonas species in patients with suppurative infections. Master of Medical Science (Microbiology) thesis 2002. Institute of Medicine 1, Yangon.Google Scholar
Hlaing, SS (2004) Isolation of Pseudomonas pseudomallei (Burkholderia pseudomallei) from a case of tetanus in YGH. Myanmar Journal of Current Medical Practice 9, 812.Google Scholar
Aung, MK (2004) Indigenous isolates of Burkholderia pseudomallei – the causative agent of melioidosis. Myanmar Journal of Current Medical Practice 9, 1315.Google Scholar
Htun, ZT (2013) Detection of Burkholderia pseudomallei in patients with suppurative infections attending Yangon General Hospital and New Yangon General Hospital. Myanmar Health Sciences Research Journal 25, 114119.Google Scholar
Aung, MK and Mar, TT (2008) Re-emergence of melioidosis in Myanmar. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 102, 1011.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wellcome Trust-Mahidol University Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Program. Standard Operating Procedure for isolation of Burkholderia pseudomallei from clinical samples, 2015. Available at https://www.melioidosis.info/info.aspx?pageID=104&contentID=1040206.Google Scholar
Turner, P et al. (2019) Microbiology Investigation Criteria for Reporting Objectively (MICRO): a framework for the reporting and interpretation of clinical microbiology data. BMC Medicine 17, 70.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dance, DAB et al. (2021) Interpreting Burkholderia pseudomallei disc diffusion susceptibility test results by the EUCAST method. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 27, 827829. doi: 10.1016/j.cmi.2021.02.017.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (2017) Performance standards for antimicrobial susceptibility testing. In CLSI supplement M100, 27th Edn. Wayne, PA: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute.Google Scholar
Novak, RT et al. (2006) Development and evaluation of a real-time PCR assay targeting the type III secretion system of Burkholderia pseudomallei. Journal of Clinical Microbiology 44, 8590.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Knappik, M et al. (2015) Evaluation of molecular methods to improve the detection of Burkholderia pseudomallei in soil and water samples from Laos. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 81, 37223727.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Currie, BJ et al. (2007) Using BOX-PCR to exclude a clonal outbreak of melioidosis. BMC Infectious Diseases 7, 68.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Webb, JR et al. (2020) Myanmar Burkholderia pseudomallei strains are genetically diverse and originate from Asia with phylogenetic evidence of reintroductions from neighbouring countries. Nature Scientific Reports 10, 16260.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dance, DAB et al. (2019) The cost-effectiveness of the use of selective media for the diagnosis of melioidosis in different settings. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 13, e0007598.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greer, RC et al. (2019) Misidentification of Burkholderia pseudomallei as Acinetobacter species in northern Thailand. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 113, 4851.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Birnie, E et al. (2019) Global burden of melioidosis in 2015: a systematic review and data synthesis. The Lancet Infectious Diseases 19, 892902.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hantrakun, V et al. (2019) Clinical epidemiology of 7126 melioidosis patients in Thailand and the implications for a national notifiable diseases surveillance system. Open Forum Infectious Diseases 6. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofz498.Google ScholarPubMed
Sen, S (1948) A case of melioidosis. Indian Medical Gazette 83, 186187.Google ScholarPubMed
Win, MM et al. (2018) Melioidosis in Myanmar. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases 3. doi: 10.3390/tropicalmed3010028.Google ScholarPubMed
Myat, TO et al. (2020) A prospective study of bloodstream infections among febrile adolescents and adults attending Yangon General Hospital, Yangon, Myanmar. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 14, e0008268.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dance, DAB et al. (2018) Melioidosis in the Lao People's Democratic Republic. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 3. doi: 10.3390/tropicalmed3010021.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hinjoy, S et al. (2018) Melioidosis in Thailand: present and future. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 3. doi: 10.3390/tropicalmed3020038.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bory, S et al. (2018) A report from the Cambodia training event for awareness of melioidosis (C-TEAM), October 2017. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 3. doi: 10.3390/tropicalmed3010023.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Latt, TS et al. (2019) Measurement of diabetes, prediabetes and their associated risk factors in Myanmar 2014. Diabetes. Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity: Targets and Therapy 12, 291298.Google ScholarPubMed
Doker, TJ et al. (2015) Contact investigation of melioidosis cases reveals regional endemicity in Puerto Rico. Clinical Infectious Diseases 60, 243250.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stewart, T et al. (2011) Epidemiology and investigation of melioidosis, Southern Arizona. Emerging Infectious Diseases 17, 12861288.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dance, DAB et al. (2014) Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole resistance in Burkholderia pseudomallei. International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents 44, 368369.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wuthiekanun, V et al. (2011) Survey of antimicrobial resistance in clinical Burkholderia pseudomallei isolates over two decades in Northeast Thailand. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 55, 53885391.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Clinical and demographic data for 21 patients with culture-confirmed melioidosis

Figure 1

Fig. 1. Map showing townships of residence of 21 melioidosis patients. Source :https://images.app.goo.gl/MRMRp1xtJcXbghx46.

Supplementary material: File

Win et al. supplementary material

Win et al. supplementary material

Download Win et al. supplementary material(File)
File 320.2 KB