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The TB Portals: an Open-Access, Web-Based Platform for Global Drug-Resistant-Tuberculosis Data Sharing and Analysis

Authors :
Rosenthal, Alex
Gabrielian, Andrei
Engle, Eric
Hurt, Darrell E.
Alexandru, Sofia
Crudu, Valeriu
Sergueev, Eugene
Kirichenko, Valery
Lapitskii, Vladzimir
Snezhko, Eduard
Kovalev, Vassili
Astrovko, Andrei
Skrahina, Alena
Taaffe, Jessica
Harris, Michael
Long, Alyssa
Wollenberg, Kurt
Akhundova, Irada
Ismayilova, Sharafat
Skrahin, Aliaksandr
Mammadbayov, Elcan
Gadirova, Hagigat
Abuzarov, Rafik
Seyfaddinova, Mehriban
Avaliani, Zaza
Strambu, Irina
Zaharia, Dragos
Muntean, Alexandru
Ghita, Eugenia
Bogdan, Miron
Mindru, Roxana
Spinu, Victor
Sora, Alexandra
Ene, Catalina
Vashakidze, Sergo
Shubladze, Natalia
Nanava, Ucha
Tuzikov, Alexander
Tartakovsky, Michael
Source :
Journal of Clinical Microbiology; September 2017, Vol. 55 Issue: 11 p3267-3282, 16p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe TB Portals program is an international consortium of physicians, radiologists, and microbiologists from countries with a heavy burden of drug-resistant tuberculosis working with data scientists and information technology professionals. Together, we have built the TB Portals, a repository of socioeconomic/geographic, clinical, laboratory, radiological, and genomic data from patient cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis backed by shareable, physical samples. Currently, there are 1,299 total cases from five country sites (Azerbaijan, Belarus, Moldova, Georgia, and Romania), 976 (75.1%) of which are multidrug or extensively drug resistant and 38.2%, 51.9%, and 36.3% of which contain X-ray, computed tomography (CT) scan, and genomic data, respectively. The top Mycobacterium tuberculosislineages represented among collected samples are Beijing, T1, and H3, and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that confer resistance to isoniazid, rifampin, ofloxacin, and moxifloxacin occur the most frequently. These data and samples have promoted drug discovery efforts and research into genomics and quantitative image analysis to improve diagnostics while also serving as a valuable resource for researchers and clinical providers. The TB Portals database and associated projects are continually growing, and we invite new partners and collaborations to our initiative. The TB Portals data and their associated analytical and statistical tools are freely available at https://tbportals.niaid.nih.gov/.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00951137 and 1098660X
Volume :
55
Issue :
11
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Microbiology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs43612073
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01013-17