Abstract

The macrolide azithromycin is recommended for treatment of Mycoplasma genitalium infection; however, M. genitalium strains possessing macrolide resistance-mediating mutations (MRMMs) are increasingly being reported. Here, we used the SpeeDx ResistancePlus MG kit, which provides simultaneous detection of M. genitalium and MRMMs, to assess MRMM carriage among M. genitalium infections in Queensland, Australia. Performance characteristics of the ResistancePlus MG kit for M. genitalium detection were compared to in-house PCR. Available M. genitalium PCR-positive (n=67) and negative (n=281) samples from the years 2011 to 2017 were tested using the SpeeDx ResistancePlus MG kit. In total, 63.6 % M. genitalium-positive samples were indicated to harbour MRMMs. The ResistancePlus MG method provided sensitivity and specificity of 97 and 99.6 % respectively compared to in-house PCR for M. genitalium detection. Such high levels of macrolide-resistant M. genitalium raise further concerns over future use of azithromycin for treatment of M. genitalium infection.

Highlights

  • The macrolide azithromycin is recommended for treatment of Mycoplasma genitalium infection; M. genitalium strains possessing macrolide resistance-mediating mutations (MRMMs) are increasingly being reported

  • Treatment for M. genitalium is becoming problematic due to the high proportions of M. genitalium strains exhibiting resistance to the azithromycin caused by macrolide resistance-mediating mutations (MRMMs) in the M. genitalium 23S rRNA gene

  • Prevalence may differ between heterosexual populations and men-who-have-sexwith-men (MSM) with a recent study from Victoria, Australia showing that MSM were twice as likely to harbour MRMMs compared to heterosexual men (76 % compared to 39 %; [7])

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Summary

Introduction

The macrolide azithromycin is recommended for treatment of Mycoplasma genitalium infection; M. genitalium strains possessing macrolide resistance-mediating mutations (MRMMs) are increasingly being reported. Nucleic acid amplification tests are recommended for both diagnosing M. genitalium infection and assessing antimicrobial resistance [2]. The ResistancePlus MG assay (SpeeDx, Australia) is a PCR-based commercial method that simultaneously detects M. genitalium as well as five MRMMs [8].

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