Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jun 2012)

Trichomonas vaginalis Antimicrobial Drug Resistance in 6 US Cities, STD Surveillance Network, 2009–2010

  • Robert D. Kirkcaldy,
  • Peter Augostini,
  • Lenore E. Asbel,
  • Kyle T. Bernstein,
  • Roxanne P. Kerani,
  • Christie J. Mettenbrink,
  • Preeti Pathela,
  • Jane R. Schwebke,
  • W. Evan Secor,
  • Kimberly A. Workowski,
  • Darlene Davis,
  • Jim Braxton,
  • Hillard S. Weinstock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1806.111590
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 6
pp. 939 – 943

Abstract

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Nitroimidazoles (metronidazole and tinidazole) are the only recommended drugs for treating Trichomonas vaginalis infection, and previous samples that assessed resistance of such isolates have been limited in geographic scope. We assessed the prevalence of in vitro aerobic metronidazole and tinidazole resistance among T. vaginalis isolates from multiple geographic sites in the United States. Swab specimens were obtained from women who underwent routine pelvic examinations at sexually transmitted disease clinics in 6 US cities. Cultured T. vaginalis isolates were tested for nitroimidazole resistance (aerobic minimum lethal concentration [MLC] >50 µg/mL). Of 538 T. vaginalis isolates, 23 (4.3%) exhibited low-level in vitro metronidazole resistance (minimum lethal concentrations 50–100 µg/mL). No isolates exhibited moderate- to high-level metronidazole resistance or tinidazole resistance. Results highlight the possibility that reliance on a single class of antimicrobial drugs for treating T. vaginalis infections may heighten vulnerability to emergence of resistance. Thus, novel treatment options are needed.

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