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      Neisseria gonorrhoeae diagnostic escape from a gyrA-based test for ciprofloxacin susceptibility and the effect on zoliflodacin resistance: a bacterial genetics and experimental evolution study

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      The Lancet. Microbe

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          Summary

          Background

          The aetiological bacterial agent of gonorrhoea, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, has become resistant to each of the first-line antibiotics used to treat it, including ciprofloxacin. One diagnostic approach to identify ciprofloxacin-susceptible isolates is to determine codon 91 in the gene encoding the A subunit of DNA gyrase, gyrA, where coding for the wild-type serine ( gyrA 91S) is associated with ciprofloxacin susceptibility and phenylalanine ( gyrA 91F) with resistance. The aim of this study was to investigate the possibility of diagnostic escape from gyrA susceptibility testing.

          Methods

          We used bacterial genetics to introduce pairwise substitutions in GyrA positions 91 (S or F) and 95 (D, G, or N), which is a second site in GyrA associated with ciprofloxacin resistance, into five clinical isolates of N gonorrhoeae. All five isolates encoded GyrA S91F, an additional substitution in GyrA at position 95, substitutions in ParC that are known to cause an increased minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) to ciprofloxacin, and GyrB 429D, which is associated with susceptibility to zoliflodacin (a spiropyrimidinetrione-class antibiotic in phase 3 trials for treatment of gonorrhoea). We evolved these isolates to assess for the existence of pathways to ciprofloxacin resistance (MIC ≥1 μg/mL) and measured MICs for ciprofloxacin and zoliflodacin. In parallel, we searched metagenomic data for 11 355 N gonorrhoeae clinical isolates with reported ciprofloxacin MICs that were publicly available from the European Nucleotide Archive for strains that would be identified as susceptible by gyrA codon 91-based assays.

          Findings

          Three clinical isolates of N gonorrhoeae with substitutions in GyrA position 95 associated with resistance (G or N) maintained intermediate ciprofloxacin MICs (0·125–0·5 μg/mL), which has been associated with treatment failure, despite reversion of GyrA position 91 from phenylalanine to serine. From an in-silico analysis of the 11 355 genomes from N gonorrhoeae clinical isolates, we identified 30 isolates with gyrA codon 91 encoding a serine and a ciprofloxacin resistance-associated mutation at codon 95. The reported MICs for these isolates varied from 0·023 μg/mL to 0·25 μg/mL, including four with intermediate ciprofloxacin MICs (associated with substantially increased risk of treatment failure). Finally, through experimental evolution, one clinical isolate of N gonorrhoeae bearing GyrA 91S acquired ciprofloxacin resistance through mutations in the gene encoding for the B subunit of DNA gyrase ( gyrB) that also conferred reduced susceptibility to zoliflodacin (ie, MIC ≥2 μg/mL).

          Interpretation

          Diagnostic escape from gyrA codon 91 diagnostics could occur through either reversion of the gyrA allele or expansion of circulating lineages. N gonorrhoeae genomic surveillance efforts might benefit from including gyrB, given its potential for contributing to ciprofloxacin and zoliflodacin resistance, and diagnostic strategies that reduce the likelihood of escape, such as the incorporation of multiple target sites, should be investigated. Diagnostics that guide antibiotic therapy can have unintended consequences, including novel resistance determinants and antibiotic cross-resistance.

          Funding

          US National Institutes of Health National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of General Medical Sciences, and the Smith Family Foundation.

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          Most cited references29

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          Antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the 21st century: past, evolution, and future.

          Neisseria gonorrhoeae is evolving into a superbug with resistance to previously and currently recommended antimicrobials for treatment of gonorrhea, which is a major public health concern globally. Given the global nature of gonorrhea, the high rate of usage of antimicrobials, suboptimal control and monitoring of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and treatment failures, slow update of treatment guidelines in most geographical settings, and the extraordinary capacity of the gonococci to develop and retain AMR, it is likely that the global problem of gonococcal AMR will worsen in the foreseeable future and that the severe complications of gonorrhea will emerge as a silent epidemic. By understanding the evolution, emergence, and spread of AMR in N. gonorrhoeae, including its molecular and phenotypic mechanisms, resistance to antimicrobials used clinically can be anticipated, future methods for genetic testing for AMR might permit region-specific and tailor-made antimicrobial therapy, and the design of novel antimicrobials to circumvent the resistance problems can be undertaken more rationally. This review focuses on the history and evolution of gonorrhea treatment regimens and emerging resistance to them, on genetic and phenotypic determinants of gonococcal resistance to previously and currently recommended antimicrobials, including biological costs or benefits; and on crucial actions and future advances necessary to detect and treat resistant gonococcal strains and, ultimately, retain gonorrhea as a treatable infection. Copyright © 2014, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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            Quinolone-mediated bacterial death.

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              Emergence of multidrug-resistant, extensively drug-resistant and untreatable gonorrhea.

              The new superbug Neisseria gonorrhoeae has retained resistance to antimicrobials previously recommended for first-line treatment and has now demonstrated its capacity to develop resistance to the extended-spectrum cephalosporin, ceftriaxone, the last remaining option for first-line empiric treatment of gonorrhea. An era of untreatable gonorrhea may be approaching, which represents an exceedingly serious public health problem. Herein, we review the evolution, origin and spread of antimicrobial resistance and resistance determinants (with a focus on extended-spectrum cephalosporins) in N. gonorrhoeae, detail the current situation regarding verified treatment failures with extended-spectrum cephalosporins and future treatment options, and highlight essential actions to meet the large public health challenge that arises with the possible emergence of untreatable gonorrhea. Essential actions include: implementing action/response plans globally and nationally; enhancing surveillance of gonococcal antimicrobial resistance, treatment failures and antimicrobial use/misuse; and improving prevention, early diagnosis and treatment of gonorrhea. Novel treatment strategies, antimicrobials (or other compounds) and, ideally, a vaccine must be developed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101769019
                49714
                Lancet Microbe
                Lancet Microbe
                The Lancet. Microbe
                2666-5247
                30 March 2023
                April 2023
                28 February 2023
                04 April 2023
                : 4
                : 4
                : e247-e254
                Affiliations
                Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA (D H F Rubin AB, T D Mortimer PhD, Y H Grad MD)
                Author notes

                Contributors

                DHFR performed the experimental work. DHFR and TDM analysed the genomic data. TDM assembled the genomic dataset. YHG supervised and managed the study. DHFR and YHG wrote the manuscript.

                All authors contributed to data interpretation and reviewed and edited the final manuscript. All authors had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. DHFR and TDM verified the underlying data of the study.

                Correspondence to: Dr Yonatan H Grad, Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA, ygrad@ 123456hsph.harvard.edu
                Article
                NIHMS1887317
                10.1016/S2666-5247(22)00356-1
                10071290
                36868257
                c9969fd3-ab9b-42f0-aa5f-796b533f6474

                This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license.

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