Antibiotics (Apr 2022)

Detection and Prevalence of Macrolide and Fluoroquinolone Resistance in <i>Mycoplasma genitalium</i> in Badalona, Spain

  • Belén Rivaya,
  • Chloé Le Roy,
  • Elena Jordana-Lluch,
  • Gema Fernández-Rivas,
  • Cristina Casañ,
  • Victoria González,
  • Jun Hao Wang-Wang,
  • Cécile Bébéar,
  • Lurdes Matas,
  • Sabine Pereyre

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11040485
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 485

Abstract

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Macrolide and fluoroquinolone resistance (MLr/FQr) in Mycoplasma genitalium (MG) infections is concerning worldwide. Current guidelines recommend performing MLr detection in MG-positive cases to adjust antimicrobial therapy. We aimed to evaluate the usefulness of PCR followed by pyrosequencing for MLr detection in comparison with a one-step commercial assay and to assess the prevalence of MLr and FQr in Badalona, Spain. A total of 415 MG-positive samples by Allplex STI-7 (Seegene) were analyzed for MLr detection by pyrosequencing. From those, 179 samples were further analyzed for MG and MLr by ResistancePlus® MG kit (SpeeDx) and 100 of them also for fluoroquinolone resistance (FQr) by sequencing the parC gene. Regarding MG detection, Allplex and Resistance Plus® showed an overall agreement of 87%, but this value rose to 95.4% if we compare them for MLr detection. Prevalence of MLr was 23.1% in Badalona, but this rate increased to 73.7% in the HIV-positive patients cohort. FQr detection showed 3% of resistant strains. Pyrosequencing is a convenient and cheap technique for MLr detection, but one-step tools should be considered in high-throughput laboratories. Despite the fact that MLr remained moderate and FQr was low in our study, simultaneous MG and MLr detection would improve patient’s management applying resistance-guided treatment strategies.

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