Abstract

BackgroundAntimicrobial-resistant (AMR) Neisseria gonorrhoeae is an urgent threat to public health, as strains resistant to at least one of the two last-line antibiotics used in empiric therapy of gonorrhoea, ceftriaxone and azithromycin, have spread internationally. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) data can be used to identify new AMR clones and transmission networks and inform the development of point-of-care tests for antimicrobial susceptibility, novel antimicrobials and vaccines. Community-driven tools that provide an easy access to and analysis of genomic and epidemiological data is the way forward for public health surveillance.MethodsHere we present a public health-focussed scheme for genomic epidemiology of N. gonorrhoeae at Pathogenwatch (https://pathogen.watch/ngonorrhoeae). An international advisory group of experts in epidemiology, public health, genetics and genomics of N. gonorrhoeae was convened to inform on the utility of current and future analytics in the platform. We implement backwards compatibility with MLST, NG-MAST and NG-STAR typing schemes as well as an exhaustive library of genetic AMR determinants linked to a genotypic prediction of resistance to eight antibiotics. A collection of over 12,000 N. gonorrhoeae genome sequences from public archives has been quality-checked, assembled and made public together with available metadata for contextualization.ResultsAMR prediction from genome data revealed specificity values over 99% for azithromycin, ciprofloxacin and ceftriaxone and sensitivity values around 99% for benzylpenicillin and tetracycline. A case study using the Pathogenwatch collection of N. gonorrhoeae public genomes showed the global expansion of an azithromycin-resistant lineage carrying a mosaic mtr over at least the last 10 years, emphasising the power of Pathogenwatch to explore and evaluate genomic epidemiology questions of public health concern.ConclusionsThe N. gonorrhoeae scheme in Pathogenwatch provides customised bioinformatic pipelines guided by expert opinion that can be adapted to public health agencies and departments with little expertise in bioinformatics and lower-resourced settings with internet connection but limited computational infrastructure. The advisory group will assess and identify ongoing public health needs in the field of gonorrhoea, particularly regarding gonococcal AMR, in order to further enhance utility with modified or new analytic methods.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) Neisseria gonorrhoeae is an urgent threat to public health, as strains resistant to at least one of the two last-line antibiotics used in empiric therapy of gonorrhoea, ceftriaxone and azithromycin, have spread internationally

  • The N. gonorrhoeae scheme in Pathogenwatch provides customised bioinformatic pipelines guided by expert opinion that can be adapted to public health agencies and departments with little expertise in bioinformatics and lower-resourced settings with internet connection but limited computational infrastructure

  • Algorithms for sequence typing and core genome multi-locus sequence typing (cgMLST) clustering Alleles and sequence types (STs) for multi-locus sequence typing (MLST) [45] and cgMLST (N. gonorrhoeae cgMLST v1.0) [46] were obtained from PubMLST [47, 48], for N. gonorrhoeae multi-antigen sequence typing (NG-MAST) [49] from [50] and for N. gonorrhoeae sequence typing for antimicrobial resistance (NG-STAR) [51] from [52] (Table 1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) Neisseria gonorrhoeae is an urgent threat to public health, as strains resistant to at least one of the two last-line antibiotics used in empiric therapy of gonorrhoea, ceftriaxone and azithromycin, have spread internationally. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an urgent threat to public health. The strictly human pathogen causing the sexually transmitted infection (STI) gonorrhoea, has developed or acquired resistance to the last-line antibiotics used in empiric therapy to treat the infection, and has become one of the major global priorities in order to tackle AMR. In 2017, due to the increase in AMR infections and the absence of an effective vaccine, the World Health Organization (WHO) included N. gonorrhoeae as a high priority pathogen in need of research and development of new antimicrobials and ideally a vaccine [1]. Infections during pregnancy can transmit to newborns at birth causing eye damage that can have permanent effects on vision [6]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call