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Rifampicin tolerance and growth fitness among isoniazid-resistant clinical Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from a longitudinal study

Authors :
Srinivasan Vijay
Nguyen Le Hoai Bao
Dao Nguyen Vinh
Le Thanh Hoang Nhat
Do Dang Anh Thu
Nguyen Le Quang
Le Pham Tien Trieu
Hoang Ngoc Nhung
Vu Thi Ngoc Ha
Phan Vuong Khac Thai
Dang Thi Minh Ha
Nguyen Huu Lan
Maxine Caws
Guy E Thwaites
Babak Javid
Nguyen Thuy Thuong
Source :
eLife, Vol 13 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2024.

Abstract

Antibiotic tolerance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis reduces bacterial killing, worsens treatment outcomes, and contributes to resistance. We studied rifampicin tolerance in isolates with or without isoniazid resistance (IR). Using a minimum duration of killing assay, we measured rifampicin survival in isoniazid-susceptible (IS, n=119) and resistant (IR, n=84) isolates, correlating tolerance with bacterial growth, rifampicin minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs), and isoniazid-resistant mutations. Longitudinal IR isolates were analyzed for changes in rifampicin tolerance and genetic variant emergence. The median time for rifampicin to reduce the bacterial population by 90% (MDK90) increased from 1.23 days (IS) and 1.31 days (IR) to 2.55 days (IS) and 1.98 days (IR) over 15–60 days of incubation, indicating fast and slow-growing tolerant sub-populations. A 6 log10-fold survival fraction classified tolerance as low, medium, or high, showing that IR is linked to increased tolerance and faster growth (OR = 2.68 for low vs. medium, OR = 4.42 for low vs. high, p-trend = 0.0003). High tolerance in IR isolates was associated with rifampicin treatment in patients and genetic microvariants. These findings suggest that IR tuberculosis should be assessed for high rifampicin tolerance to optimize treatment and prevent the development of multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3b8a06ec8c904a9c82bb9d877cf08e28
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.93243