A systematic review of the impacts of oral tetracycline class antibiotics on antimicrobial resistance in normal human flora

Author:

Truong Robinson12,Tang Vincent1,Grennan Troy34,Tan Darrell H. S.1256ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, 1 King’s College Cir, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada

2. Centre for Urban Health Solutions, St. Michael’s Hospital, 209 Victoria St, Toronto, ON M5B 1T8, Canada

3. BC Centre for Disease Control, 655 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver, BC V5Z 4R4, Canada

4. Division of Infectious Diseases and Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, 317–2194 Health Sciences Mall, Vancouver, BC V6 T 1Z3, Canada

5. Division of Infectious Diseases, St. Michael’s Hospital, 36 Queen St E, Toronto, ON M5B 1W8, Canada

6. Department of Medicine, St. Michael’s Hospital, 36 Queen St E, Toronto, ON M5B 1W8, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Objectives There is interest in doxycycline as prophylaxis against sexually transmitted infections (STIs), but concern about antimicrobial resistance (AMR). We conducted a systematic review (CRD42021273301) of the impact of oral tetracycline-class antibiotics on AMR in normal flora. Methods We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library (1940–2021) and conference proceedings (2014–21) for randomized controlled trials in adults comparing daily oral tetracycline-class antibiotics to non-tetracycline controls. The primary outcome was AMR to tetracyclines; secondary outcomes included resistance to non-tetracyclines. Data were inappropriate for meta-analysis, so we analysed findings descriptively. Results Our search yielded 6265 abstracts of which 7 articles fulfilled inclusion criteria. Most were at moderate/high risk of bias, generally due to inadequate methodologic reporting. Studies used doxycycline, tetracycline, oxytetracycline or minocycline for 2–18 weeks. Most observed an increased burden of tetracycline resistance, including in subgingival (n = 3 studies), gastrointestinal (n = 2) and upper respiratory tract (n = 1) flora; one study of skin flora found no change in tetracycline-resistant Propionibacterium species after 18 weeks of oxytetracycline/minocycline. Four studies reassessed AMR at 2–50 weeks post-intervention and reported varying degrees of resistance. Three articles reported on the prevalence of non-tetracycline AMR after doxycycline prophylaxis, of which one found a transient increase among gastrointestinal Escherichia coli; the other two showed no difference from control. Conclusions Although the effects are modest and transient, limited data from small prospective studies may suggest that oral tetracyclines for 2–18 weeks increase resistance in subgingival, gastrointestinal and upper respiratory tract flora. STI prophylaxis trials should include AMR in commensal bacteria as study outcomes.

Funder

Early Researcher Award from the Government of Ontario

Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in HIV Prevention and STI Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference63 articles.

1. Infectious syphilis in high-income settings in the 21st century;Fenton;Lancet Infect Dis,2008

2. Diagnosing antimicrobial resistance;Burnham;Nat Rev Microbiol,2017

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