Background: The treatment of hardware infections often utilizes chronic oral suppression antibiotics to prevent infection recurrence. However, when methicillin-resistant and other bacteria are non-susceptible to doxycycline, limited oral antibiotic options can be available that do not cause significant side effects and drug-drug interactions. Consequently, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the ability of Gram-positive clinical prosthetic joint infection isolates that were non-susceptible to doxycycline and to retain susceptibility to minocycline.

Methods: Twenty-six Gram-positive prosthetic joint infection isolates that were not susceptible to doxycycline were evaluated for retained minocycline susceptibility with the use of minocycline gradient diffusion test strips.

Results: All five of the coagulase-negative staphylococcal isolates and eight of the eleven methicillin-resistant isolates were susceptible to minocycline, despite being doxycycline non-susceptible. None of the five PJI isolates retained susceptibility to minocycline and only two of the five isolates ( = 5) were susceptible to minocycline.

Conclusions: The findings have direct clinical implications supporting minocycline susceptibility testing for patients with PJI and other hardware-associated infections, which have isolates that are doxycycline non-susceptible to thereby provide alternative suppression antibiotic options.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9498444PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/idr14050069DOI Listing

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