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Refined understanding of the impact of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex diversity on the intrinsic susceptibility to pretomanid.

Authors :
Rupasinghe P
Reenaers R
Vereecken J
Mulders W
Cogneau S
Merker M
Niemann S
Vally Omar S
Rigouts L
Köser CU
Decroo T
de Jong BC
Source :
Microbiology spectrum [Microbiol Spectr] 2024 Mar 05; Vol. 12 (3), pp. e0007024. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Feb 09.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Previous work reported unprecedented differences in the intrinsic in vitro susceptibility of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) to pretomanid (Pa) using the Mycobacteria Growth Indicator Tube (MGIT) system. We tested 125 phylogenetically diverse strains from all known MTBC lineages (1-9) without known Pa resistance mutations and four strains with known resistance mutations as controls. This confirmed that MTBC, unlike most bacteria-antimicrobial combinations, displayed substantial differences in the intrinsic susceptibility relative to the technical variation of Pa MIC testing. This was also the case for the Middlebrook 7H11 (7H11) medium, demonstrating that these differences were not specific to MGIT. Notably, lineage 1 was confirmed to have intrinsically elevated MICs compared with lineages 2, 3, 4, and 7 (L2-4/7), underlining the urgent need for WHO to publish its decision of whether lineage 1 should be deemed treatable by BPaL(M), the now preferred all-oral regimen for treating rifampin-resistant tuberculosis. Lineages 5 and 6, which are most frequent in West Africa, responded differently to Pa, with lineage 5 being more similar to L2-4/7 and lineage 6 being more susceptible. More data are needed to determine whether 7H11 MICs are systematically lower than those in MGIT.<br />Importance: This study confirmed that the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex lineage 1, responsible for 28% of global tuberculosis cases, is less susceptible to pretomanid (Pa). It also refined the understanding of the intrinsic susceptibilities of lineages 5 and 6, most frequent in West Africa, and lineages 8 and 9. Regulators must review whether these in vitro differences affect the clinical efficacy of the WHO-recommended BPaL(M) regimen and set breakpoints for antimicrobial susceptibility testing accordingly. Notably, regulators should provide detailed justifications for their decisions to facilitate public scrutiny.<br />Competing Interests: C.U.K. is a consultant for Becton Dickinson, the Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics, the TB Alliance, and the WHO Global TB Programme. C.U.K.'s consulting for Becton Dickinson involves collaboration with Janssen and Thermo Fisher Scientific. C.U.K. is collaborating with PZA Innovation and is an unpaid advisor to Cepheid and GenoScreen (GenoScreen covered related travel and accommodation expenses only). C.U.K. worked as a consultant for the Stop TB Partnership and the WHO Regional Office for Europe. C.U.K. gave a paid educational talk for Oxford Immunotec. C.U.K. was an unpaid advisor to BioVersys.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2165-0497
Volume :
12
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Microbiology spectrum
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38334384
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00070-24