AI Article Synopsis

  • Mycobacterium chelonae, M. avium, and M. abscessus are emerging pathogens that cause mycobacteriosis, and treatment efficacy relies on identifying their species and drug sensitivity.
  • A study from Colombia analyzed the susceptibility of these mycobacteria to macrolides and aminoglycosides using the GenoType® NTM-DR method over a four-year period.
  • Results showed that most M. avium cultures were sensitive to both drug classes, while a significant proportion of M. abscessus showed resistance to macrolides; all M. chelonae cultures were sensitive, highlighting Amikacin as the least resistant drug among these species.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The Mycobacterium chelonae species and the M. avium and M. abscessus complexes are emerging pathogens that cause mycobacteriosis. Treatment depends on the species and subspecies identified. The drugs of choice are macrolides and aminoglycosides. However, due to the resistance identified to these drugs, determining the microbe’s sensitivity profile will allow clinicians to improve the understanding of the prognosis and evolution of these pathologies.

Objective: To describe the macrolide and aminoglycoside susceptibility profile of cultures identified by Colombia’s Laboratorio Nacional de Referencia de Mycobacteria from 2018 to 2022, as Mycobacterium avium complex, M. abscessus complex, and M. chelonae. Materials and methods. This descriptive study exposes the susceptibility profile to macrolides and aminoglycosides of cultures identified as M. avium complex, M. abscessus complex, and M. chelonae using the GenoType® NTM-DR method.

Materials And Methods: This descriptive study exposes the susceptibility profile to macrolides and aminoglycosides of cultures identified as M. avium complex, M. abscessus complex, and M. chelonae using the GenoType® NTM-DR method.

Results: We identified 159 (47.3 %) cultures as M. avium complex, of which 154 (96.9 %) were sensitive to macrolides, and 5 (3.1 %) were resistant; all were sensitive to aminoglycosides. From the 125 (37.2 %) cultures identified as M. abscessus complex, 68 (54.4 %) were sensitive to macrolides, 57 (45.6 %) were resistant to aminoglycosides, and just one (0.8 %) showed resistance to aminoglycosides. The 52 cultures (15.5 %) identified as M. chelonae were sensitive to macrolides and aminoglycosides.

Conclusions: The three studied species of mycobacteria have the least resistance to Amikacin. Subspecies identification and their susceptibility profiles allow the establishment of appropriate treatment schemes, especially against M. abscessus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11329272PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7705/biomedica.7197DOI Listing

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