Antimicrobial Susceptibility and Phylogenetic Relations in a German Cohort Infected with Mycobacterium abscessus

感染脓肿分枝杆菌的德国人群的抗生素敏感性和系统发育关系

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作者:Nils Wetzstein #, Thomas A Kohl #, Tilman G Schultze, Sönke Andres, Carla Bellinghausen, Christian Hügel, Volkhard A J Kempf, Annette Lehn, Michael Hogardt, Hubert Serve, Maria J G T Vehreschild, Timo Wolf, Stefan Niemann, Florian P Maurer, Thomas A Wichelhaus

Abstract

Mycobacterium abscessus is a highly antibiotic-resistant opportunistic pathogen causing clinically challenging infections in patients with preexisting lung diseases or under immunosuppression. Hence, reliable antibiotic susceptibility data are required for effective treatment. Aims of this study were to investigate (i) the congruence of genotypic and phenotypic antimicrobial susceptibility testing, (ii) the relationship between resistance profile and clinical course, and (iii) the phylogenetic relations of M. abscessus in a German patient cohort. A total of 39 isolates from 29 patients infected or colonized with M. abscessus underwent genotypic and phenotypic drug susceptibility testing. Clinical data were correlated with susceptibility data. Phylogenetic analysis was performed by means of whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis. Macrolide resistance was mainly mediated by functional Erm(41) methyltransferases (T28 sequevars) in M. abscessus subsp. abscessus (n = 25) and M. abscessus subsp. bolletii (n = 2). It was significantly associated with impaired culture conversion (P = 0.02). According to the core SNP phylogeny, we identified three clusters of closely related isolates with SNP distances below 25. Representatives of all circulating global clones (Absc. 1, Absc. 2, and Mass. 1) were identified in our cohort. However, we could not determine evidence for in-hospital interhuman transmission from clinical data. In our patient cohort, we identified three M. abscessus clusters with closely related isolates and representatives of the previously described international clusters but no human-to-human in-hospital transmission. Macrolide and aminoglycoside susceptibility data are critical for therapeutic decision-making in M. abscessus infections.

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