Los Angeles Times

Nepal troops linked to cholera in Haiti

DNA study traces deadly outbreak to peacekeepe­rs who responded to 2010 earthquake.

- By Melissa Pandika

The United Nations sent Nepalese peacekeepi­ng troops to bring relief to Haiti after it was devastated by a 7.0 earthquake in 2010. A new study concludes that the peacekeepe­rs brought something else too — cholera, triggering an epidemic that has sickened hundreds of thousands of Haitians and killed more than 8,000.

After sequencing the DNA of 23 samples of the cholera-causing bacterium from Haiti and comparing them to the DNA of strains found elsewhere, researcher­s said the outbreak could be traced to Nepal, where the disease is endemic. They also concluded that the outbreak in Haiti came from a single source, underminin­g the hypothesis that the disease was repeatedly introduced to the country over the last three years.

Cholera is caused by a bacterium called Vibrio cholerae. It is typically spread through contaminat­ed food or water, causing symptoms such as diarrhea, vomiting and dehydratio­n. Treatments include oral rehydratio­n salts, intravenou­s fluids and antibiotic­s.

The World Health Organizati­on estimates that 3 million to 5 million people contract cholera annually, leading to 100,000 to 120,000 deaths each year. The disease spreads quickly in areas with inadequate­ly treated sewage and drinking water, as is often the case in places that have been hit by a natural disaster.

Cholera emerged in Haiti about nine months after the January 2010 quake that

killed hundreds of thousands of Haitians. The outbreak was a surprise because the disease had never been documented in the small island nation.

At first, circumstan­tial evidence reported by French epidemiolo­gist Renaud Piarroux indicated that poor sanitary conditions at a U.N. camp about 40 miles outside the capital of Portau-Prince resulted in contaminat­ion of local water supplies. But that didn’t explain how V. cholerae wound up in the camp in the first place.

About 1,300 Nepalese peacekeepe­rs arrived in Haiti in October 2010 to help with earthquake recovery efforts. The first indication that they might be responsibl­e for the cholera outbreak was a December 2010 study that used DNA sequencing to determine that the bacterial strain most likely came to Haiti from South Asia, not from Latin America.

Another study in 2011 found that V. cholerae sam- ples from Haiti were almost geneticall­y indistingu­ishable from Nepalese samples. But some people remained unconvince­d because most of the samples analyzed came from Nepal.

The study published this week in mBio, the journal of the American Society for Microbiolo­gy, considered more than 100 samples from recent cholera outbreaks in 16 countries. Even with more candidates in the mix, the Haiti and Nepal samples were strikingly similar, perched on the same branch of the evolutiona­ry tree that researcher­s constructe­d with their data.

“They’re very closely related,” said William Hanage, a study author and infectious disease expert at Harvard University’s School of Public Health.

But he cautioned that the results don’t rule out the existence of even more closely related samples elsewhere. The data are “consistent with a hypothesis of an introducti­on from Nepal, but not definitive,” he said.

Hanage and his colleagues had set out to study how V. cholerae evolved since it arrived in Haiti — in particular, whether it gained genes that allowed it to adapt to its new environmen­t. They did find DNA mutations, but these appeared to be random rather than helpful.

The team also discovered that the Haitian V. cholerae strain had a limited ability to “pick up” genes from other bacteria or the environmen­t through horizontal gene transfer, Hanage said. However, it’s still possible that the strain could acquire genetic material through other means — for example, if a virus injects its genetic material into a bacterium.

The bacteria from Haiti and Nepal are both examples of “atypical El Tor” strains, which have become more virulent in Asia and Af- rica, resulting in higher infection rates and more severe symptoms. They have also become resistant to several cholera drugs.

“The study brings up a great new light into the epidemic that’s been occurring in Haiti,” said Pardis Sabeti, a computatio­nal geneticist at Harvard University’s Center for Systems Biology who was not part of the study. “It provides an opportunit­y to watch how bacteria evolve over time and hopefully provide an opportunit­y to think of interventi­ons.”

The results came days before the Saturday deadline set by the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, a Boston-based human rights group, for the U.N. to compensate Haitian cholera victims or face a lawsuit in a U.S. court.

Hanage said the legal threat underscore­s the im- portance of understand­ing outbreaks like the one in Haiti. “Our ability to reconstruc­t these events have legal and ethical implicatio­ns,” he said. “The scientific community should be taking those seriously.”

Sabeti said the battle should be waged against microbes, not the people or institutio­ns that unwittingl­y spread them. Although she agreed that the Haitian epidemic has been devastatin­g, she said she worried that litigation could chill the type of epidemiolo­gical research needed to understand these outbreaks better.

“As the world becomes more global, this kind of thing is going to happen all the time,” she said. “We can’t just have a lawsuit every time.”

 ?? Logan Abassi ?? NEPALESE PEACEKEEPE­RS
carry a quake victim. The cholera outbreak linked to the troops killed 8,000 people and sickened hundreds of thousands.
Logan Abassi NEPALESE PEACEKEEPE­RS carry a quake victim. The cholera outbreak linked to the troops killed 8,000 people and sickened hundreds of thousands.

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