Abstract

BackgroundThis study analyzed the laboratory diagnosis results and drug resistance of patients infected with non-tuberculous mycobacterium (NTM). MethodsWe collected information on patients with positive indicators of NTM infection at the Henan Provincial Chest Hospital from 2020 to 2022. Acid-fast smear, mycobacterium culture, QB-SPOT assay, GeneXpert MTB/RIF assay, immunoglobulin E test, tuberculosis antibody test, and microplate method for drug sensitivity test were analyzed using strain identification as the gold standard. ResultsThe 242 cases of NTM infection were predominantly detected with slow-growing mycobacteria (a detection rate of 87.19%), among which Mycobacterium intracellulare (66.53%), Mycobacterium avium (15.70%), and Mycobacterium chelonei/abscessus complex (11.16%) ranked the top three in terms of the isolation rate. Males patients accounted for a higher proportion (58.26%) than females (41.74%), and the majority of them were over 60 years (50.83%). Among laboratory tests for patients with NTM infection, mycobacterium culture showed a highest detected rate (87.20%) among laboratory tests. The results of the drug sensitivity test demonstrated that the resistance rate of NTM was generally high. Moreover, the Mycobacterium avium complex with the highest isolation rate showed 100% resistant to doxycycline and minocycline, but exhibited relatively high sensitivity to moxifloxacin (a resistance rate of 7.89%) and rifabutin (a resistance rate of 13.16%). The Mycobacterium chelonei/abscessus complex was 100% resistant to doxycycline and relatively sensitive to cefoxitin (29.17%) and clarithromycin (37.50%). ConclusionThe NTM species isolated by the Henan Provincial Chest Hospital is dominated by Mycobacterium intracellulare and the highest positive rate is detected by mycobacterium culture among laboratory tests. NTM infection generally exhibits a high rate of drug resistance. Accordingly, the accurate diagnosis of NTM diseases requires enhanced drug sensitivity testing to provide patients with targeted combination drug treatment.

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