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Dive into the research topics where Lucilaine Ferrazoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucilaine Ferrazoli.


BMC Microbiology | 2008

Reliable identification of mycobacterial species by PCR-restriction enzyme analysis (PRA)-hsp65 in a reference laboratory and elaboration of a sequence-based extended algorithm of PRA-hsp65 patterns.

Erica Chimara; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Suely Yoko Misuka Ueky; Maria Conceição Martins; Alan Mitchel Durham; Robert D. Arbeit; Sylvia Cardoso Leão

BackgroundIdentification of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) based on phenotypic tests is time-consuming, labor-intensive, expensive and often provides erroneous or inconclusive results. In the molecular method referred to as PRA-hsp65, a fragment of the hsp65 gene is amplified by PCR and then analyzed by restriction digest; this rapid approach offers the promise of accurate, cost-effective species identification. The aim of this study was to determine whether species identification of NTM using PRA-hsp65 is sufficiently reliable to serve as the routine methodology in a reference laboratory.ResultsA total of 434 NTM isolates were obtained from 5019 cultures submitted to the Institute Adolpho Lutz, Sao Paulo Brazil, between January 2000 and January 2001. Species identification was performed for all isolates using conventional phenotypic methods and PRA-hsp65. For isolates for which these methods gave discordant results, definitive species identification was obtained by sequencing a 441 bp fragment of hsp65. Phenotypic evaluation and PRA-hsp65 were concordant for 321 (74%) isolates. These assignments were presumed to be correct. For the remaining 113 discordant isolates, definitive identification was based on sequencing a 441 bp fragment of hsp65. PRA-hsp65 identified 30 isolates with hsp65 alleles representing 13 previously unreported PRA-hsp65 patterns. Overall, species identification by PRA-hsp65 was significantly more accurate than by phenotype methods (392 (90.3%) vs. 338 (77.9%), respectively; p < .0001, Fishers test). Among the 333 isolates representing the most common pathogenic species, PRA-hsp65 provided an incorrect result for only 1.2%.ConclusionPRA-hsp65 is a rapid and highly reliable method and deserves consideration by any clinical microbiology laboratory charged with performing species identification of NTM.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2008

Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains of the Beijing genotype are rarely observed in tuberculosis patients in South America

Viviana Ritacco; Patrícia Izquierdo Cafrune; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Philip Noel Suffys; Norma Candia; Lucy Vásquez; Teresa Realpe; Jorge Fernández; Karla Valéria Batista Lima; Jeannete Zurita; Jaime Robledo; Maria Lucia Rosa Rossetti; Afranio Lineu Kritski; Maria Alice da Silva Telles; Juan Carlos Palomino; Herre Heersma; Dick van Soolingen; Kristin Kremer; Lucía Barrera

The frequency of the Beijing genotype of Mycobacterium tuberculosis as a cause of tuberculosis (TB) in South America was determined by analyzing genotypes of strains isolated from patients that had been diagnosed with the disease between 1997 and 2003 in seven countries of the subcontinent. In total, 19 of the 1,202 (1.6%) TB cases carried Beijing isolates, including 11 of the 185 patients from Peru (5.9%), five of the 512 patients from Argentina (1.0%), two of the 252 Brazilian cases (0.8%), one of the 166 patients from Paraguay (0.6%) and none of the samples obtained from Chile (35), Colombia (36) and Ecuador (16). Except for two patients that were East Asian immigrants, all cases with Beijing strains were native South Americans. No association was found between carrying a strain with the Beijing genotype and having drug or multi-drug resistant disease. Our data show that presently transmission of M. tuberculosis strains of the Beijing genotype is not frequent in Latin America. In addition, the lack of association of drug resistant TB and infection with M. tuberculosis of the Beijing genotype observed presently demands efforts to define better the contribution of the virulence and lack of response to treatment to the growing spread of Beijing strains observed in other parts of the world.


Microbes and Infection | 2010

Emerging multidrug resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains of the Beijing genotype circulating in Russia express a pattern of biological properties associated with enhanced virulence.

Elena B. Lasunskaia; Simone C. M. Ribeiro; Olga Manicheva; Lia Lima Gomes; Philip Noel Suffys; Igor Mokrousov; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Marcelle R. M. de Andrade; Afranio Lineu Kritski; Tatiana Otten; Thereza L. Kipnis; Wilmar Dias da Silva; Boris Vishnevsky; Martha Maria Oliveira; Harrison Magdinier Gomes; Ida Maria Foschiani Dias Baptista; Olga Narvskaya

The epidemiologically important Mycobacterium tuberculosis Beijing genotype strains, highly endemic in East Asia, have become an emerging infection in certain geographic areas, including Russia, because of its increasing prevalence and association with multidrug resistance (MDR). The aim was to verify whether MDR Beijing strains circulating in the emerging regions present some biological particularities that could contribute to their success in causing disease in comparison with the sporadic strains from locations with low prevalence of the Beijing genotype. We evaluated virulence-associated characteristics of the MDR Beijing strains isolated in Russia and compared them with those of the drug-resistant and susceptible Beijing strains from Brazil and reference H37Rv strain. We found that Russian MDR strains demonstrated an increased bacterial fitness and growth in THP-1 macrophage-like cells, as well as a higher capacity to induce non-protective cytokine synthesis and necrotic macrophage death. By contrast, the biological properties of the strains isolated in Brazil largely resembled those of the H37Rv strain, with the exception of the drug-resistant isolates that presented significantly reduced fitness. The data demonstrate that the emerging MDR strains of the Beijing genotype circulating in Russia do express a pattern of properties associated with the enhanced virulence favouring its clonal dissemination in this region.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 1996

Tuberculosis and HIV infection among female inmates in Sao Paulo Brazil: a prospective cohort study.

Marizete M. C. Ferreira; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Moises Palaci; Paulo S. Salles; Lucas A. Medeiros; Patricia Novoa; Carlos R. Kiefer; Manoel Schechtmann; Afranio Lineu Kritski; Warren D. Johnson; Lee W. Riley; Orlando C. Ferreira

Prison populations are at increased risk of both human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections, but among female inmates information on such risks remains scarce, especially in developing countries. Between October 1992 and November 1993, 350 women incarcerated at a prison in São Paulo, Brazil, were prospectively evaluated for HIV and M. tuberculosis infection and disease. Among them, 87 (25%) were HIV seropositive, and 20 (5.7%) had tuberculosis (TB). During the incarceration period, the purified protein derivative test conversion rate was 29% for HIV-positive and 32% for HIV-negative women. However, the incidence of TB was 9.9 per 100 person-years for HIV-positive and 0.7 per 100 person-years of incarceration for HIV-negative women (p < 0.0001). A multivariate analysis indicated that HIV infection (p < 0.0001) and incarceration time < 12 months (p < 0.05) were each associated with TB. These findings indicate that new transmissions of M. tuberculosis infection are common among female inmates and that HIV-infected women are more likely to acquire active disease during the first 12 months of incarceration. Because of their role in childbearing and care female inmates are an important potential source of transmission of M. tuberculosis, and new strategies to control the spread of TB in prisons need to be developed.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2015

Prisons as Reservoir for Community Transmission of Tuberculosis, Brazil

Flávia Patussi Correa de Sacchi; Renata M. Praça; Mariana Bento Tatara; Vera Simonsen; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Mariana Garcia Croda; Philip Noel Suffys; Albert I. Ko; Jason R. Andrews; Julio Croda

We conducted a population-based study of tuberculosis (TB) cases in Dourados, Brazil, to assess the relationship between incarceration and TB in the general population. Incarceration was associated with TB in an urban population; 54% of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains were related to strains from persons in prisons. TB control in prisons is critical for reducing disease prevalence.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2004

Molecular characterization of Mycobacterium kansasii isolates in the State of São Paulo between 1995-1998

Erica Chimara; Carmen Maria Saraiva Giampaglia; Maria Conceição Martins; Maria Alice da Silva Telles; Suely Yoko Mizuka Ueki; Lucilaine Ferrazoli

Mycobacterium kansasii is the most common cause of pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacteria infection and classical identification of this pathogen needs a time consuming phenotypic tests. Polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis (PRA) of the gene enconding for the 65 kDa heat shock (hsp65) protein offers an easy, rapid, and inexpensive procedure to identify and subtype M. kansasii isolates. In the present study, we performed a retrospective analysis of patients who had mycobacteria identified on the basis of phenotypic tests by means of a review of database at Mycobacteria Laboratory of the Instituto Adolfo Lutz in the period 1995-1998. A total of 9381 clinical isolates were analyzed of which 7777 (82.9%) were identified as M. tuberculosis complex and 1604 (17.1%) as nontuberculous mycobacteria. Of the 296 M. kansasii isolates, 189 (63.8%) isolates obtained from 119 patients were viable and were analyzed by PRA-hsp65. Hundred eight two (98.9%) were classified as M. kansasii type I. Two isolates were classified as type II and III and five isolates were characterized as other Mycobacterium species. Clinical isolates of M. kansasii in the state of Sao Paulo was almost exclusively subtype I regardless of HIV status.


Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2012

Conspicuous multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis cluster strains do not trespass country borders in Latin America and Spain.

Viviana Ritacco; María-José Iglesias; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Johana Monteserin; Elis Regina Dalla Costa; Alberto Cebollada; Nora Morcillo; Jaime Robledo; Jacobus H. de Waard; Pamela Araya; Liselotte Aristimuño; Raúl Díaz; Patricia Gavín; Belén Imperiale; Vera Simonsen; Elsa Zapata; María Soledad Jiménez; Maria Lucia Rosa Rossetti; Carlos Martín; Lucía Barrera; Sofía Samper

Multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain diversity in Ibero-America was examined by comparing extant genotype collections in national or state tuberculosis networks. To this end, genotypes from over 1000 patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis diagnosed from 2004 through 2008 in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Venezuela and Spain were compared in a database constructed ad hoc. Most of the 116 clusters identified by IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism were small and restricted to individual countries. The three largest clusters, of 116, 49 and 25 patients, were found in Argentina and corresponded to previously documented locally-epidemic strains. Only 13 small clusters involved more than one country, altogether accounting for 41 patients, of whom 13 were, in turn, immigrants from Latin American countries different from those participating in the study (Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia). Most of these international clusters belonged either to the emerging RD(Rio) LAM lineage or to the Haarlem family of M. tuberculosis and four were further split by country when analyzed with spoligotyping and rifampin resistance-conferring mutations, suggesting that they did not represent ongoing transnational transmission events. The Beijing genotype accounted for 1.3% and 10.2% of patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Latin America and Spain, respectively, including one international cluster of two cases. In brief, Euro-American genotypes were widely predominant among multidrug-resistant M. tuberculosis strains in Ibero-America, reflecting closely their predominance in the general M. tuberculosis population in the region, and no evidence was found of acknowledged outbreak strains trespassing country borders.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1997

Analysis of Mycobacterium avium complex serovars isolated from AIDS patients from Southeast Brazil

Maria Helena Féres Saad; Veronique Vincent; David J. Dawson; Moises Palaci; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Leila de Souza Fonseca

The purpose of this study was to assess the distribution of Mycobacterium avium serovars isolated from AIDS patients in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. Ninety single site or multiple site isolates from 75 patients were examined. The most frequent serovars found were 8 (39.2%), 4 (21.4%) and 1 (10.7%). The frequency of mixed infections with serovar 8 or 4 was 37.8%. Among the 90 strains examined, M. intracellulare serovars (7 strains) and M. scrofulaceum (4 strains) were found in 11 isolates (12%) indicating that M. avium (88%) was the major opportunistic species in the M. avium complex isolates in Brazilian AIDS patients.


American Journal of Infection Control | 2016

Pseudooutbreak of rapidly growing mycobacteria due to Mycobacterium abscessus subsp bolletii in a digestive and respiratory endoscopy unit caused by the same clone as that of a countrywide outbreak

Thais Guimaraes; Erica Chimara; Gladys Villas Boas do Prado; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Natalia Garcia Fernandes Carvalho; Fernanda Cristina dos Santos Simeão; Andréia Rodrigues de Souza; Christiane A.R. Costa; Cristina Viana Niero; Urze Adomaitis Brianesi; Thais Sabato Romano Di Gioia; Laura Maria Brasileiro Gomes; Fernanda Spadão; Maria das Graças Silva; Eduardo Guimarães Hourneaux de Moura; Anna S. Levin

BACKGROUND The nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are widely spread. In Brazil, 2,520 cases of rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM) infections after medical procedures were reported, with 5.4% of cases related to nonsurgical invasive procedures and with an occurrence of 1 clone (BRA100) of Mycobacterium abscessus subsp bolletii. OBJECTIVE To describe a pseudooutbreak of M abscessus subsp bolletii in an endoscopy and bronchoscopy unit. METHODS The alert for a pseudooutbreak was given when 3 patients, in the same week, had a positive bronchoalveolar lavage culture for M abscessus subsp bolletii. The patients had no symptoms/signs of mycobacterial infection; thus, contamination of bronchoscopes was suspected. Samples for culturing were collected from bronchoscopes, digestive endoscopes, automated disinfection machines, and the water supply. Clinical samples were identified by polymerase chain reaction restriction-enzyme analysis (PRA) of the hsp65 gene and their pulsed-field gel electrophoresis pattern was compared with environmental samples. RESULTS The investigation demonstrated a contamination of bronchoscopes, digestive endoscopes, and disinfection machines. Molecular typing demonstrated that all strains belonged to the same clone (MAB01), identical to clone BRA100. DISCUSSION Cross-transmission due to poor disinfection as well as resistance to glutaraldehyde may play roles in the spread of MAB01 M abscessus subsp bolletii, which may have a unique resistance to the environment and adaption to human hosts. However the water supply may have played a role. Attention is needed to ensure the quality of water used to rinse disinfected equipment.


Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2013

Population structure and circulating genotypes of drug-sensitive and drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis clinical isolates in São Paulo state, Brazil

Maria Conceição Martins; Carmen Maria Saraiva Giampaglia; Rosângela Siqueira Oliveira; Vera Simonsen; Fábio Oliveira Latrilha; Letícia Lisboa Moniz; David Couvin; Nalin Rastogi; Lucilaine Ferrazoli

São Paulo is the most populous Brazilian state and reports the largest number of tuberculosis cases in the country annually (over 18,500). This study included 193 isolates obtained during the 2nd Nationwide Survey on Mycobacterium tuberculosis Drug Resistance that was conducted in São Paulo state and 547 isolates from a laboratory based study of drug resistance that were analyzed by the Mycobacteria Reference Laboratory at the Institute Adolfo Lutz. Both studies were conducted from 2006 to 2008 and sought to determine the genetic diversity and pattern of drug resistance of M. tuberculosis isolates (MTC) circulating in São Paulo. The patterns obtained from the spoligotyping analysis demonstrated that 51/740 (6.9%) of the isolates corresponded to orphan patterns and that 689 (93.1%) of the isolates distributed into 144 shared types, including 119 that matched a preexisting shared type in the SITVIT2 database and 25 that were new isolates. A total of 77/144 patterns corresponded to unique isolates, while the remaining 67 corresponded to clustered patterns (n=612 isolates clustered into groups of 2-84 isolates each). The evolutionarily ancient PGG1 lineages (Beijing, CAS1-DEL, EAI3-IND, and PINI2) were rarely detected in São Paulo and comprised only 13/740, or 1.76%, of the total isolates; all of the remaining 727/740, or 98.24%, of the MTC isolates from São Paulo state were from the recent PGG2/3 evolutionary isolates belonging to the LAM, T, S, X, and Haarlem lineages, i.e., the Euro-American group. This study provides the first overview of circulating genotypes of M. tuberculosis in São Paulo state and demonstrates that the clustered shared types containing seven or more M. tuberculosis isolates that are spread in São Paulo state included both resistant and susceptible isolates.

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Moises Palaci

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Afranio Lineu Kritski

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Lee W. Riley

University of California

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