Abstract

BackgroundDiscordant genotypic/phenotypic rifampicin susceptibility testing in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a significant challenge, yet there are limited data on its prevalence and how best to manage such patients. Whether to treat isolates with rpoB mutations not conferring phenotypic resistance as susceptible or multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is unknown. We describe phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of discordant isolates and clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of affected patients in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.MethodsWe analyzed clinical isolates showing rifampicin resistance on GenoType MTBDRplus while susceptible on 1% agar proportion method. We measured rifampicin minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) using Middlebrook 7H10 agar dilution and BACTEC MGIT 960. Sensititre MYCOTB plates were used for drug-susceptibility testing, and rpoB gene sequencing was performed on all isolates. Local MDR-TB program data were reviewed for clinical information and patient outcomes.ResultsDiscordant isolates constituted 4.6% (60) of 1302 rifampicin-resistant cases over the study period. Of these, 62% remained susceptible to isoniazid and 98% remained susceptible to rifabutin. Rifampicin MICs were close to the critical concentration of 1 µg/mL (0.5–2 µg/mL) for 83% of isolates. The most frequent rpoB mutations were Q513P (25.3%), D516V (19.2%), and D516Y (13.3%). Whereas 70% were human immunodeficiency virus infected, the mean CD4 count was 289 cells/mm3 and 87% were receiving antiretroviral therapy. Standard therapy for MDR-TB was used and 53% achieved successful treatment outcomes.ConclusionsRifampicin-discordant TB is not uncommon and sequencing is required to confirm results. The high susceptibility to rifabutin and isoniazid and poor treatment outcomes with the current regimen suggest a potential utility for rifabutin-based therapy.

Highlights

  • Discordant genotypic/phenotypic rifampicin susceptibility testing in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a significant challenge, yet there are limited data on its prevalence and how best to manage such patients

  • The lower rate found in this study may be due to the fact we used solid agar-based assays for rifampicin susceptibility testing instead of the widely used broth-based methods, which are more likely to demonstrate rifampicin susceptibility in the presence of discordant rpoB mutations compared with agar-based methods [6, 7]

  • Our study shows that routine phenotypic and genotypic assays are inadequate in solving this dilemma

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Summary

Introduction

Discordant genotypic/phenotypic rifampicin susceptibility testing in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a significant challenge, yet there are limited data on its prevalence and how best to manage such patients. Whether to treat isolates with rpoB mutations not conferring phenotypic resistance as susceptible or multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is unknown. We describe phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of discordant isolates and clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of affected patients in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

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