Abstract

Mycoplasma genitalium causes a common, sexually transmitted bacterial infection. This study assessed the detection of M. genitalium in stored urine samples to understand the impact of sample storage on M.genitalium detection. Aliquots of M. genitalium-positive urine (n=20 patients) were stored at either room temperature (22°C) or 4°C, without a preservative. At weekly intervals, samples were tested using the commercial test ResistancePlus MG® (SpeeDx® , Australia). We report the analysis at 1week, an acceptable collection-to-test turnaround time, with further analysis over 5weeks to illustrate degradation trends. After storing at 4°C, the proportion of specimens that remained positive for M. genitalium was 100% after 1week and 95% after 4weeks. Storage at 22°C led to more rapid decline in detection in the first 4weeks, with 95% detected after 1week and 85% at 2weeks onwards. At 5weeks, samples stored at both temperatures had an 85% M. genitalium detection rate, with increase in crossing points (Cq) of 0·72 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0·01-1·43; P-trend=0·027) at 4°C, and 1·75 ((95% CI 0·79-2·71), P-trend <0·001) at 22°C. Urine samples stored without preservative, and unfrozen, retained high M. genitalium detection levels over the short term (up to 5weeks). To minimize degradation, storing at 4°C is recommended. There is little known about the stability of clinical samples for M. genitalium detection. This study found that a high proportion (85-100%) of samples are still suitable for M. genitalium detection after storage for up to 5weeks.

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