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WGS to predict antibiotic MICs for Neisseria gonorrhoeae.

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TLDR
A WGS-based MIC prediction approach that allows reliable MIC prediction for five gonorrhoea antimicrobials is demonstrated and should allow reasonably precise prediction of MICs for a range of bacterial species.
Abstract
Background: Tracking the spread of antimicrobial-resistant Neisseria gonorrhoeae is a major priority for national surveillance programmes. / Objectives: We investigate whether WGS and simultaneous analysis of multiple resistance determinants can be used to predict antimicrobial susceptibilities to the level of MICs in N. gonorrhoeae. / Methods: WGS was used to identify previously reported potential resistance determinants in 681 N. gonorrhoeae isolates, from England, the USA and Canada, with phenotypes for cefixime, penicillin, azithromycin, ciprofloxacin and tetracycline determined as part of national surveillance programmes. Multivariate linear regression models were used to identify genetic predictors of MIC. Model performance was assessed using leave-one-out cross-validation. / Results: Overall 1785/3380 (53%) MIC values were predicted to the nearest doubling dilution and 3147 (93%) within ±1 doubling dilution and 3314 (98%) within ±2 doubling dilutions. MIC prediction performance was similar across the five antimicrobials tested. Prediction models included the majority of previously reported resistance determinants. Applying EUCAST breakpoints to MIC predictions, the overall very major error (VME; phenotypically resistant, WGS-prediction susceptible) rate was 21/1577 (1.3%, 95% CI 0.8%–2.0%) and the major error (ME; phenotypically susceptible, WGS-prediction resistant) rate was 20/1186 (1.7%, 1.0%–2.6%). VME rates met regulatory thresholds for all antimicrobials except cefixime and ME rates for all antimicrobials except tetracycline. Country of testing was a strongly significant predictor of MIC for all five antimicrobials. / Conclusions: We demonstrate a WGS-based MIC prediction approach that allows reliable MIC prediction for five gonorrhoea antimicrobials. Our approach should allow reasonably precise prediction of MICs for a range of bacterial species.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae: Global surveillance and a call for international collaborative action

TL;DR: In a Policy Forum, Teodora Wi and colleagues discuss the challenges of antimicrobial resistance in gonococci and the need to understand more fully the role of antibiotics in the development of resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gonorrhoea treatment failure caused by a Neisseria gonorrhoeae strain with combined ceftriaxone and high-level azithromycin resistance, England, February 2018

TL;DR: A heterosexual male was diagnosed with gonorrhoea in the United Kingdom following sexual intercourse with a locally resident female in Thailand and failed treatment with ceftriaxone plus doxycycline and subsequently spectinomycin, resulting in resistance arose from two mechanisms combining for the first time in a genetic background similar to a commonly circulating strain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using Genomics to Track Global Antimicrobial Resistance.

TL;DR: A scientific literature review is conducted and a description of examples of available tools and databases for antimicrobial resistance (AMR) detection and future perspectives and recommendations are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genome-Based Prediction of Bacterial Antibiotic Resistance.

TL;DR: It is argued that standardization of WGS-AST by challenge with consistently phenotyped strain sets of defined genetic diversity is necessary to compare the efficacy of methods of prediction of antibiotic resistance based on genome sequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Practical issues in implementing whole-genome-sequencing in routine diagnostic microbiology

TL;DR: The question of whether WGS can entirely replace routine microbiology in the future and the tension between the fact that most sequencers are designed to process multiple samples in parallel whereas for optimal diagnosis a one-by-one processing of the samples is preferred are speculated.
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