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Inclusion of minor alleles improves catalogue-based prediction of fluoroquinolone resistance in<i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>

Alice Brankin, Philip W. Fowler

2023JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Fluoroquinolone resistance poses a threat to the successful treatment of tuberculosis. WGS, and the subsequent detection of catalogued resistance-associated mutations, offers an attractive solution to fluoroquinolone susceptibility testing but sensitivities are often less than 90%. We hypothesize that this is partly because the bioinformatic pipelines used usually mask the recognition of minor alleles that have been implicated in fluoroquinolone resistance. Methods We analysed the Comprehensive Resistance Prediction for Tuberculosis: an International Consortium (CRyPTIC) dataset of globally diverse WGS Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates, with matched MICs for two fluoroquinolone drugs and allowed putative minor alleles to contribute to resistance prediction. Results Detecting minor alleles increased the sensitivity of WGS for moxifloxacin resistance prediction from 85.4% to 94.0%, without significantly reducing specificity. We also found no correlation between the proportion of an M. tuberculosis population containing a resistance-conferring allele and the magnitude of resistance. Conclusions Together our results highlight the importance of detecting minor resistance-conferring alleles when using WGS, or indeed any sequencing-based approach, to diagnose fluoroquinolone resistance.

Topics & Concepts

Mycobacterium tuberculosisMinor allele frequencyTuberculosisAlleleMicrobiologyMinor (academic)GeneticsMedicineVirologyBiologyAllele frequencyGenePhilosophyPathologyHumanitiesTuberculosis Research and EpidemiologyPneumonia and Respiratory InfectionsMycobacterium research and diagnosis