| Literature DB >> 27307460 |
Damon Getman1, Alice Jiang2, Meghan O'Donnell2, Seth Cohen3.
Abstract
The prevalence rates of Mycoplasma genitalium infections and coinfections with other sexually transmitted organisms and the frequency of a macrolide antibiotic resistance phenotype were determined in urogenital specimens collected from female and male subjects enrolled in a multicenter clinical study in the United States. Specimens from 946 subjects seeking care from seven geographically diverse clinical sites were tested for M. genitalium and for Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Trichomonas vaginalis Sequencing was used to assess macrolide antibiotic resistance among M. genitalium-positive subjects. M. genitalium prevalence rates were 16.1% for females and 17.2% for males. Significant risk factors for M. genitalium infections were black race, younger age, non-Hispanic ethnicity, and female symptomatic status. Female M. genitalium infections were significantly more prevalent than C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae infections, while the M. genitalium infection rate in males was significantly higher than the N. gonorrhoeae and T. vaginalis infection rates. The macrolide-resistant phenotype was found in 50.8% of females and 42% of males. These results show a high prevalence of M. genitalium single infections, a lower prevalence of coinfections with other sexually transmitted organisms, and high rates of macrolide antibiotic resistance in a diverse sample of subjects seeking care across a wide geographic area of the United States.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27307460 PMCID: PMC5005488 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.01053-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948
Prevalence of M. genitalium by subject age group, self-identified demographic status, and health care facility type
| Category | No. with | |
|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | |
| Age | ||
| 14–17 yr | 12/40 (30.0 [18.7–45.4]) | No data |
| 18–20 yr | 35/140 (25.0 [18.6–32.8]) | 6/48 (12.5 [5.9–24.7]) |
| 21–30 yr | 28/210 (13.3 [9.4–18.6]) | 53/220 (24.1 [18.9–30.2]) |
| 31–40 yr | 7/73 (9.6 [4.7–18.5]) | 11/75 (14.7 [8.4–24.4]) |
| 41–50 yr | 1/34 (2.9 [0.5–14.9]) | 3/49 (6.1 [2.1–16.5]) |
| 51–60 yr | 1/16 (6.3 [1.1–28.3]) | 1/29 (3.4 [0.6–17.2]) |
| 61–70 yr | 0/2 (0 [0–65.8]) | 0/9 (0 [0–29.9]) |
| 71–78 yr | No data | 0/1 (0 [0–79.4]) |
| ≤30 yr | 75/390 (19.2 [15.6–23.4]) | 59/268 (22 [17.5–27.4]) |
| >30 yr | 9/125 (7.2 [3.8–13.1]) | 15/163 (9.2 [5.7–14.6]) |
| All females (14–70 yr) | 83/515 (16.1 [13.2–19.6]) | |
| All males (18–78 yr) | 74/431 (17.2 [13.9–21]) | |
| Symptomatic status | ||
| Symptomatic | 69/327 (21.1 [17–25.8]) | 33/171 (19.3 [14.1–25.9]) |
| Asymptomatic | 14/188 (7.5 [4.5–12.1]) | 40/260 (15.4 [11.5–20.3]) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| Black | 76/323 (23.5 [19.2–28.5]) | 76/272 (27.9 [22.9–33.6]) |
| White | 8/163 (4.9 [2.5–9.4]) | 5/117 (4.3 [1.8–9.6]) |
| Asian | 0/5 (0 [0–43.5]) | 0/2 (0 [0–65.8]) |
| Unknown race | 0/24 (0 [0–13.8]) | 4/40 (10.0 [4–23.1]) |
| Hispanic | 1/49 (2.0 [0.4–10.7]) | 4/75 (5.3 [2.1–12.9]) |
| Non-Hispanic | 77/401 (19.2 [15.6–23.3]) | 63/294 (21.4 [17.1–26.5]) |
| Unknown ethnicity | 6/65 (9.2 [4.3–18.7]) | 6/62 (9.7 [4.5–19.6]) |
| Enrollment site | ||
| Family medicine/OB-GYN, northeastern USA | 2/84 (2.4 [0.6–8.3]) | 1/66 (1.5 [0.3–8.1]) |
| Family planning clinic, southwestern USA | 0/24 (0 [0–13.8]) | 14/127 (11.0 [6.7–17.7]) |
| Public health clinic, southeastern USA | 13/78 (16.7 [10–26.5]) | 35/153 (22.9 [16.9–30.2]) |
| Public health clinic, mid-Atlantic USA | 8/39 (20.5 [10.8–35.5]) | 20/79 (25.3 [17–35.9]) |
| Hospital system high-risk STD clinics, midwestern USA | 10/54 (18.5 [10.4–30.8]) | 3/6 (50.0 [18.8–81.2]) |
| Adolescent gynecology clinic, midwestern USA | 39/135 (28.9 [21.9–37]) | No data |
| Family planning clinic, midwestern USA | 4/22 (18.2 [7.3–38.5]) | No data |
OR of 2.67 (P = 0.0075) versus females >30 years of age.
OR of 2.39 (P = 0.0043) versus males >30 years of age.
Clinician-diagnosed urethritis, vaginitis, or cervicitis in females or urethritis in males.
OR of 2.83 (P < 0.0007) versus asymptomatic females.
OR of 4.79 (P < 0.0001) versus white females.
OR of 6.54 (P < 0.0001) versus white males.
OR of 9.41 (P = 0.0276) versus Hispanic females.
OR of 4.02 (P = 0.0089) versus Hispanic males.
Prevalence of M. genitalium, C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae, and T. vaginalis detected in 515 females and 431 males
| Organism | Infected (% [95% CI]) | |
|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | |
| 16.3 (13.4–19.8) | 17.2 (13.9–21) | |
| 9.3 (7.1–12.1) | 17.8 (14.5–21.8) | |
| 1.9 (1.1–3.5) | 4.2 (2.7–6.5) | |
| 25.2 (21.7–29.2) | 5.6 (3.8–8.2) | |
OR of 1.75 (P = 0.0035) versus C. trachomatis, OR of 8.4 (P < 0.0001) versus N. gonorrhoeae, and OR of 0.646 (P < 0.0044) versus T. vaginalis.
OR of 4.11 (P < 0.0001) versus N. gonorrhoeae and OR of 3.08 (P < 0.0001) versus T. vaginalis.
FIG 1Distribution of single-infection and coinfection rates of sexually transmitted organisms among 223 women and 155 men who tested positive for a sexually transmitted infection. TV, Trichomonas vaginalis; MG, Mycoplasma genitalium; CT, Chlamydia trachomatis; NG, Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
M. genitalium macrolide antibiotic resistance marker frequency in female and male subjects
| Category | No. with 23S rRNA 2058/2059 | |
|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | |
| All subjects | 65/128 (50.8 [42.2–59.3]) | 21/50 (42 [29.4–55.8]) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| Black | 59/102 (57.8 [48.1–67]) | 20/44 (45.4 [31.7–60]) |
| White | 5/22 (22.7 [10.1–43.4]) | 1/4 (25 [4.6–70]) |
| Unknown race | 1/4 (25 [4.6–70]) | 0/2 (0 [0–65.8]) |
| Hispanic | 1/6 (16.7 [30.1–56.4]) | 1/2 (50 [9.5–90.6]) |
| Non-Hispanic | 61/112 (54.5 [45.2–63.4]) | 18/43 (41.8 [28.4–56.7]) |
| Unknown ethnicity | 3/10 (30 [10.8–60.3]) | 2/5 (40 [11.8–76.9]) |
| Symptomatic status | ||
| Symptomatic | 57/102 (55.9 [46.2–65.1]) | 9/21 (42.9 [24.5–63.5]) |
| Asymptomatic | 8/26 (30.8 [16.5–50]) | 12/29 (41.4 [25.5–59.3]) |
| Age | ||
| 14–24 yr | 52/97 (53.6 [43.7–63.2]) | 12/24 (50 [31.4–68.6]) |
| 25–47 yr | 13/31 (41.9 [26.4–59.2]) | 9/26 (34.6 [19.4–53.8]) |
E. coli 23S rRNA numbering.
OR of 2.54 (P = 0.0734) versus white females.
OR of 1.81 (P = 0.172) versus asymptomatic females.