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Resistance-Guided Treatment of Gonorrhea: A Prospective Clinical Study

Jeffrey D. Klausner, Claire Bristow, Olusegun O. Soge, Akbar Shahkolahi, Toni Waymer, Robert Bolan, Susan Philip, Lenore Asbel, Stephanie N. Taylor, Leandro Mena, Deborah Goldstein, Jonathan Powell, Michael R. Wierzbicki, Sheldon Morris

2020Clinical Infectious Diseases55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Novel treatment strategies to slow the continued emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae are urgently needed. A molecular assay that predicts in vitro ciprofloxacin susceptibility is now available but has not been systematically studied in human infections. METHODS: Using a genotypic polymerase chain reaction assay to determine the status of the N. gonorrhoeae gyrase subunit A serine 91 codon, we conducted a multisite prospective clinical study of the efficacy of a single oral dose of ciprofloxacin 500 mg in patients with culture-positive gonorrhea. Follow-up specimens for culture were collected to determine microbiological cure 5-10 days post-treatment. RESULTS: Of the 106 subjects possessing culture-positive infections with wild-type gyrA serine N. gonorrhoeae genotype, the efficacy of single-dose oral ciprofloxacin treatment in the per-protocol population was 100% (95% 1-sided confidence interval, 97.5-100%). CONCLUSIONS: Resistance-guided treatment of N. gonorrhoeae infections with single-dose oral ciprofloxacin was highly efficacious. The widespread introduction and scale-up of gyrA serine 91 genotyping in N. gonorrhoeae infections could have substantial medical and public health benefits in settings where the majority of gonococcal infections are ciprofloxacin susceptible. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: NCT02961751.

Topics & Concepts

Neisseria gonorrhoeaeGonorrheaCiprofloxacinMedicineInternal medicineAntibiotic resistancePopulationAntibioticsMicrobiologyImmunologyBiologyEnvironmental healthHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Reproductive tract infections researchBacterial Infections and VaccinesNeonatal and Maternal Infections