Use of mycobacteriophage quantitative PCR on MGIT broths for a rapid tuberculosis antibiogram

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Abstract

Phenotypic culture-based drug susceptibility testing (DST) for Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a valuable tool to identify four to six active drugs for individualized multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB) regimens. Current culture-based methods are slow, however; therefore, we evaluated a rapid mycobacteriophage-based quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay for use directly on M. tuberculosis-positive MGIT broths. We compared phage qPCRs, using a simple cutoff of 3 for the ΔCq value (where Cq is quantification cycle, and ΔCq is calculated as the Cq of starting phage minus the Cq of TB isolates in drug-containing medium), on 325 clinical M. tuberculosis MGIT broth cultures versus the respective subcultured isolates tested by agar proportion. The median accuracy for the 13 drugs/concentrations tested was 98%, with most discrepancies being false-resistant results. Evaluation of phage qPCR on greater numbers of resistant strains of 393 isolates grown on Löwenstein-Jensen medium showed similar findings, with a median accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 97%, 90%, and 99%, respectively. This rapid culture-based DST methodology can be performed for any drug on TB-positive MGIT broths, with a specimen-to-antibiogram turnaround time of approximately 23.9 days, compared with waiting 58.6 days for isolate growth on solid medium followed by agar proportion DST. © 2014, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

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Foongladda, S., Klayut, W., Chinli, R., Pholwat, S., & Houpt, E. R. (2014). Use of mycobacteriophage quantitative PCR on MGIT broths for a rapid tuberculosis antibiogram. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 52(5), 1523–1528. https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.03637-13

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