Abstract

The treatment of infections from the sexually transmitted pathogen Mycoplasma genitalium is hampered by the rapidly increasing resistance to the recommended first- (macrolides) and second-line antibiotics (quinolones). Thus, resistance-guided therapy (RGT) is key for its successful eradication but the efficiency of this approach can be influenced by re-infections and treatment failures. The typing of strains is helpful to distinguish between ongoing colonization, re-infection or the development of resistance. In the present study, mgpB and MG_309 types as well as mutations associated with macrolide, quinolone and tetracycline resistance of strains in M. genitalium-positive samples accumulated in the years 2019 and 2020 at a university hospital were analyzed. Fifty-eight positive first and sixteen positive follow-up samples from patients (96.6% male, 84.5% men who have sex with men, 74.1% HIV-positive) were included. Twenty-three mgpB types (seven new types), nine MG_309 types and thirty-four mgpB/MG_309 types were identified. The prevalence of mutations associated with macrolide, quinolone and tetracycline resistance was 56.9%, 10.3% and 6.8%, respectively. Despite the fact that many asymptomatic patients were not treated and tests of cure were impossible in different cases, the preliminary rate of successful eradication (93.3%) in this study is promising for the continuation of the RGT strategy.

Highlights

  • Published: 10 August 2021Mycoplasma genitalium is a Mollicutes species characterized by a strongly reduced genome (5.8 Mbp) resulting in limited metabolic capabilities and virulence factors

  • This study summarizes the initial results after the introduction of a program of an extended characterization of M. genitalium strains in a university hospital in Germany

  • The presence of a reference laboratory locally and the close cooperation with clinical facilities allowed the consistent testing of all M. genitalium strains for markers of resistance as well the registration of patient data and of corresponding antibiotic therapy

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Summary

Introduction

Published: 10 August 2021Mycoplasma genitalium is a Mollicutes species characterized by a strongly reduced genome (5.8 Mbp) resulting in limited metabolic capabilities and virulence factors. M. genitalium were HIV-positive MSM and these strains showed additional mutations associated with macrolide and quinolone resistance. All of the 16 ToC-tested patients carrying strains without resistanceassociated mutations showed a M. genitalium-negative PCR (13 were treated with azithromycin and three with doxycycline because of accompanying sexually transmitted infections).

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