Tuberculosis:: drug resistance, fitness, and strategies for global control

被引:53
作者
Boettger, Erik C. [1 ]
Springer, Burkhard [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Zurich, Inst Med Microbiol, Natl Zentrum Mykobakteria, CH-8006 Zurich, Switzerland
关键词
tuberculosis; resistance; treatment; prevention; fitness; susceptibility testing;
D O I
10.1007/s00431-007-0606-9
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
Directly observed standardized short-course chemotherapy (DOTS) regimes are an effective treatment for drug susceptible tuberculosis disease. Surprisingly, DOTS has been reported to reduce the transmission of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, and standardized short-course chemotherapy regimens with first-line agents have been found to be adequate treatments for some patients with drug resistant tuberculosis, including multi-drug resistance. These paradoxical observations and the apparent heterogeneity in treatment outcome of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis when using standard regimens may be due in part to limitations of in vitro drug susceptibility testing based on unique but mistakenly used techniques in diagnostic mycobacteriology. Experimental data and mathematical models indicate that the fitness cost conferred by a resistance determinant is the single most important parameter which determines the spread of drug resistance. Chromosomal alterations that result in resistance to first-line antituberculosis agents, e. g. isoniazid, rifampicin, streptomycin, may or may not be associated with a fitness cost. Based on work in experimental models and from observations in clinical drug resistant isolates a picture emerges in which, among the various resistance mutations that appear with similar rates, those associated with the least fitness cost are selected in the population.
引用
收藏
页码:141 / 148
页数:8
相关论文
共 55 条
[1]  
A Medical Research Council Investigation, 1950, BMJ-BRIT MED J, V2, P1073, DOI DOI 10.1136/BMJ.2.4688.1073
[2]   The biological cost of antibiotic resistance [J].
Andersson, DI ;
Levin, BR .
CURRENT OPINION IN MICROBIOLOGY, 1999, 2 (05) :489-493
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2003, M24A NCCLS
[4]   The embAB genes of Mycobacterium avium encode an arabinosyl transferase involved in cell wall arabinan biosynthesis that is the target for the antimycobacterial drug ethambutol [J].
Belanger, AE ;
Besra, GS ;
Ford, ME ;
Mikusova, K ;
Belisle, JT ;
Brennan, PJ ;
Inamine, JM .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1996, 93 (21) :11919-11924
[5]   Crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis catalase-peroxidase [J].
Bertrand, T ;
Eady, NAJ ;
Jones, JN ;
Nagy, JM ;
Jamart-Grégoire, B ;
Raven, EL ;
Brown, KA .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2004, 279 (37) :38991-38999
[6]   Physiological cost of rifampin resistance induced in vitro in Mycobacterium tuberculosis [J].
Billington, OJ ;
McHugh, TD ;
Gillespie, SH .
ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY, 1999, 43 (08) :1866-1869
[7]   Effects of environment on compensatory mutations to ameliorate costs of antibiotic resistance [J].
Björkman, J ;
Nagaev, I ;
Berg, OG ;
Hughes, D ;
Andersson, DI .
SCIENCE, 2000, 287 (5457) :1479-1482
[8]   Fitness of antibiotic-resistant microorganisms and compensatory mutations [J].
Böttger, EC ;
Springer, B ;
Pletschette, M ;
Sander, P .
NATURE MEDICINE, 1998, 4 (12) :1343-1344
[9]   Drug resistance and fitness in Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection [J].
Böttger, EC ;
Pletschette, M ;
Andersson, D .
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2005, 191 (05) :823-824
[10]   Drug-resistant tuberculosis [J].
Böttger, EC .
LANCET, 2001, 357 (9264) :1288-1289