c Melioidosis, a disease of public health importance in Southeast Asia and northern Australia, is caused by the Gram-negative soil bacillus Burkholderia pseudomallei. Melioidosis is typically acquired through environmental exposure, and case clusters are rare, even in regions where the disease is endemic. B. pseudomallei is classed as a tier 1 select agent by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; from a biodefense perspective, source attribution is vital in an outbreak scenario to rule out a deliberate release. Two cases of melioidosis within a 3-month period at a residence in rural northern Australia prompted an investigation to determine the source of exposure. B. pseudomallei isolates from the property's groundwater supply matched the multilocus sequence type of the clinical isolates. Whole-genome sequencing confirmed the water supply as the probable source of infection in both cases, with the clinical isolates differing from the likely infecting environmental strain by just one single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) each. For the first time, we report a phylogenetic analysis of genomewide insertion/deletion (indel) data, an approach conventionally viewed as problematic due to high mutation rates and homoplasy. Our whole-genome indel analysis was concordant with the SNP phylogeny, and these two combined data sets provided greater resolution and a better fit with our epidemiological chronology of events. Collectively, this investigation represents a highly accurate account of source attribution in a melioidosis outbreak and gives further insight into a frequently overlooked reservoir of B. pseudomallei. Our methods and findings have important implications for outbreak source tracing of this bacterium and other highly recombinogenic pathogens.
Melioidosis is an underrecognized disease of significant public health burden in many tropical regions across the globe, especially northern Australia and Southeast Asia, where the greatest number of cases are reported annually (1). Melioidosis is caused by the environmental dwelling Gram-negative bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei, an opportunistic pathogen that most commonly affects people with underlying disease or risk factors, particularly diabetes and hazardous alcohol use (2). Disease severity varies widely and depends on the strain, host immunity, and inoculum size. The highest case fatality rates exceed 90% in septic shock or untreated septic cases (3). Even when appropriate therapy is administered, mortality ranges from 13% in northern Australia (4, 5) to 50% in Southeast Asia (2). In October 2012, B. pseudomallei was upgraded to a tier 1 select agent by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (www.selectagents.gov) owing to fears of a deliberate release coupled with the high mortality rate, lack of a vaccine, intrinsic resistance to standard antimicrobial agents, and protean disease presentations that confound diagnosis, particularly in regions where the disease is not endemic.B. pseudomallei infection primarily occurs via percutaneous inoculati...