High prevalence of circulating dual-class resistant Mycoplasma genitalium in asymptomatic MSM in Tokyo, Japan

Author:

Ando Naokatsu12ORCID,Mizushima Daisuke1,Takano Misao1,Mitobe Morika3,Miyake Hirofumi3,Yokoyama Keiko3,Sadamasu Kenji3,Aoki Takahiro1,Watanabe Koji1,Uemura Haruka1,Yanagawa Yasuaki1,Gatanaga Hiroyuki12,Oka Shinichi12

Affiliation:

1. AIDS Clinical Center, National Center for Global Health and Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

2. Joint Research Center for Human Retrovirus Infection, Kumamoto University, Kumamoto, Japan

3. Department of Microbiology, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Public Health, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Objectives To assess the prevalence and antibiotic resistance profile of Mycoplasma genitalium detected from urogenital/rectal swab samples obtained from MSM in Tokyo, Japan. Methods We performed PCR-based screening for M. genitalium urogenital/rectal infection in 982 asymptomatic MSM between 1 January 2019 and 5 November 2020. Mutations in the antibiotic resistance-associated genes gyrA and parC and the 23S rRNA of M. genitalium were analysed. Results The prevalence of M. genitalium infection was 6.1%: the prevalence of rectal and urogenital infection was 4.7% and 1.4%, respectively. Among the cases, 48 were successfully analysed for 23S rRNA, 41 for parC mutations and 37 for gyrA mutations. Macrolide- and quinolone-resistance associated mutations (23S rRNA and parC mutations) were observed in 43 (89.6%) and 28 (68.3%) cases, respectively. The quinolone-resistance associated mutation-harbouring variants also harboured macrolide-resistance associated mutations. The S83I mutation in the parC gene was most commonly identified (24 cases, 58.5%), and its combination with M95I or D99N mutation in the gyrA gene was observed in 9 of 36 successfully analysed cases (25.0%). No significant association was observed between the presence of antibiotic resistance and antibiotic exposure for either macrolides or fluoroquinolones (P = 0.785 and 0.402, respectively). Conclusions In Tokyo, there is an alarmingly high prevalence of M. genitalium harbouring macrolide and/or quinolone resistance-associated mutations in MSM, irrespective of antibiotic exposure. The high prevalence of M. genitalium strains with both parC and gyrA mutations limits the efficacy of sitafloxacin. Therefore, suitable alternatives are required to treat such M. genitalium infections.

Funder

National Center for Global Health and Medicine

ViiV Healthcare Supported International Clinical Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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