Literature DB >> 31262765

Acquisition of Cross-Resistance to Bedaquiline and Clofazimine following Treatment for Tuberculosis in Pakistan.

Sabira Tahseen1, Daniela Maria Cirillo2, Arash Ghodousi3, Alamdar Hussain Rizvi1, Aurangzaib Quadir Baloch4, Abdul Ghafoor4, Faisal Masood Khanzada1, Mehmood Qadir1, Emanuele Borroni3, Alberto Trovato3.   

Abstract

We report on the first six cases of acquired resistance to bedaquiline in Pakistan. Seventy sequential isolates from 30 drug-resistant-tuberculosis patients on bedaquiline-containing regimens were retrospectively tested for bedaquiline resistance by MIC testing and by the detection of mutations in relevant genes. We documented cases failing therapy that developed specific mutations in Rv0678 and had increased MICs associated with cross-resistance to clofazimine during treatment. This study underlines the relevance of surveillance programs following the introduction of new drugs.
Copyright © 2019 Ghodousi et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  XDR; antibiotic resistance; bedaquiline; clofazimine; multidrug resistance; tuberculosis; whole-genome sequencing

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31262765      PMCID: PMC6709449          DOI: 10.1128/AAC.00915-19

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother        ISSN: 0066-4804            Impact factor:   5.191


TEXT

In 2018, based on an evidence-based policy, the World Health Organization (WHO) updated its guidelines on the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) (1). The new guidelines recommend bedaquiline as a core drug in the standard combination regimen for the treatment of rifampin-resistant TB. As a result, the number of patients eligible to receive bedaquiline-containing regimens will significantly increase. Encouraging results from studies on the use of bedaquiline in all-oral shorter-course regimens for the treatment of rifampin-resistant TB will also result in an even greater use of bedaquiline by TB control programs (2–4). The scale-up of bedaquiline use should prompt, in addition to extensive pharmacovigilance to monitor adverse effects (5), the development of the capability to rapidly identify the emergence of resistance in patients during therapy. In the present study, we report on the first six cases of acquired bedaquiline resistance identified in Pakistan. The study was conducted within the framework of a retrospective surveillance project to monitor the acquisition of resistance to bedaquiline implemented by the National TB Reference Laboratory (NRL) in Pakistan and TB Supranational Reference Laboratory (SRL-Milan). Bedaquiline was introduced in Pakistan in November 2015 for the treatment of multidrug-resistant/extensively drug-resistant (MDR/XDR) TB. Since then, all clinical isolates from culture laboratories serving MDR patients on bedaquiline-containing regimens enrolled at six sites located in six different cities were sent to the NRL in Islamabad for drug susceptibility testing. For 30 patients, cultures remained positive over time. The baseline and one or more available follow-up isolates collected from these 30 patients during treatment were shipped to the SRL-Milan, between November 2017 and May 2018, to perform MIC testing for bedaquiline and genomic analysis by whole-genome sequencing (WGS). Patients’ clinical data were retrospectively extracted from medical records. The institutional review board for the HIV, TB, and Malaria program, Pakistan, approved this study. At SRL-Milan, all strains underwent MIC testing for bedaquiline in 7H11 medium, and for all isolates showing an increased MIC compared to the baseline isolate, further MIC testing for bedaquiline and clofazimine was conducted using the Bactec MGIT960 (BD, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) (6). The H37Rv (ATCC 27294) strain was used as a susceptible control in MIC testing. Bedaquiline dry powder was supplied by Janssen-Pharmaceutica (Beerse, Belgium). WGS was carried out with the Illumina Nextera-XT DNA sample preparation kit to prepare paired-end libraries of 150-bp read length to sequence on an Illumina NextSeq platform. Data analysis and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) calling were performed using the MTBseq-Pipeline on low-frequency detection mode (7). Genes associated with resistance to bedaquiline and/or clofazimine (atpE, Rv0678, pepQ, and Rv1979c) were screened for mutations (8–11). We studied 70 isolates from patients (n = 30; 8 MDR, 15 pre-XDR, and 7 XDR) enrolled in bedaquiline-containing regimens. The sequential isolates tested included two strains from 22 patients, three from 6 patients, and four from 2 patients. All baseline strains included in the study were sensitive to bedaquiline. Six patients developed an increase in bedaquiline MICs in 7H11 medium (range, 0.125 to >0.5 mg·liter−1) during therapy, and five of them became resistant to bedaquiline according to the current critical concentration proposed for the drug (Fig. 1). The phenotypic/genotypic characteristics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from these six HIV-negative, unrelated pulmonary TB patients are summarized in Table 1.
FIG 1

The MICs of bedaquiline performed in 7H11 medium in patients under treatment with bedaquiline-containing regimens at different time points. The dashed line in red shows the currently identified critical concentration for bedaquiline in 7H11 medium by the WHO (13).

TABLE 1

The phenotypic/genotypic characteristics of M. tuberculosis isolates from the six patients who acquired cross-resistance to bedaquiline and clofazimine

Strain or patient IDa Previous second-line treatment regimen/outcomeb DST profile at start of BDQ-containing regimenBDQ exposure (mo)M. tuberculosis strain testing results
Treatment outcome
pDST results for MIC (mg·liter−1) for:
Genome coverage (×)WGSc
BDQ in 7H11BDQ in MGITCFZ in MGITRv0678pepQatpERv1979cNCBI accession no.Lineage
Strain
    H37Rv (NC_000962.3)0.030.250.2543.28WTWTWTWT
Patients
    1NOPre-XDR00.1250.50.571.67WTWTWTWTSRR9028486Delhi-CAS(3)Failure
40.5Not testedNot tested40.57779130_141-142_Ins-CWTWTWTSRR9028477
60.5Not testedNot tested58.11WTWTWTSRR9028476
9>0.54468.20WTWTWTSRR9028485
    2Am(8), Lfx, Cs, Eto, Z, E, B6/failureMDR00.030.50.580.97WTWTWT2221732_P478GSRR9028481Delhi-CAS(3)Cured
20.06Not testedNot tested127.50WTWTWTSRR9028488
50.54490.23779130_141-142_Ins-CWTWTSRR9028489
    3Am, Lfx, Eto, CS, Z, PAS, B6/failureMDR00.060.250.596.26WTWTWTWTSRR9028483Delhi-CAS(3.1.2)Failure
10.06Not testedNot tested86.92WTWTWTWTSRR9028490
60.2522100.78779048_V20GWTWTWTSRR9028494
    4Cm(12), Mfx, Cs, Eto, Cfz, Z, Amx-clv/failureXDR00.030.250.581.93WTWTWTWTSRR9028487Delhi-CAS(3)Still on treatment
20.03Not testedNot tested111WTWTWTWTSRR9028484
70.2524102.74779127_138-139_Ins-GWTWTWTSRR9028491
    5Cm(12), Mfx, Cs, Eto, Cfz, Z, PAS, Clr, Amx-clv, H, E, B6/failureXDR00.030.50.568.40WTWTWTWTSRR9028482Delhi-CAS(3)Failure
10.061Not tested125.22WTWTWTWTSRR9028493
30.1252Not tested116.61779127_138-139_Ins-GWTWTWTSRR9028480
60.12524109.03WTWTWTSRR9028478
    6Cm(12), Mfx, Cs, Eto, Cfz, LNZ, PAS, Z, Amx-clv, B6/failureXDR00.030.5199.35WTWTWTWTSRR9028479Euro-American -4.9Failure
10.54483.34779181_192-193_Ins-GWTWTWTSRR9028492

ID, identifier.

AM, amikacin; Amx-clv, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid; Cfz, clofazamine; Cm, capreomycin; Cs, cyclocerine; E, ethambutol; Eto, ethionamide; Lfx, levofloxacin; LNZ, linozolid; Mfx, moxifloxacin; PAS, para-aminosalicylic acid; B6, vitamin B6; Z, pyrazinamide. Numbers in parentheses indicate the duration of the administration of the antibiotic in months.

WT, wild type.

The MICs of bedaquiline performed in 7H11 medium in patients under treatment with bedaquiline-containing regimens at different time points. The dashed line in red shows the currently identified critical concentration for bedaquiline in 7H11 medium by the WHO (13). The phenotypic/genotypic characteristics of M. tuberculosis isolates from the six patients who acquired cross-resistance to bedaquiline and clofazimine ID, identifier. AM, amikacin; Amx-clv, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid; Cfz, clofazamine; Cm, capreomycin; Cs, cyclocerine; E, ethambutol; Eto, ethionamide; Lfx, levofloxacin; LNZ, linozolid; Mfx, moxifloxacin; PAS, para-aminosalicylic acid; B6, vitamin B6; Z, pyrazinamide. Numbers in parentheses indicate the duration of the administration of the antibiotic in months. WT, wild type. Patient 1, a newly diagnosed rifampin-resistant TB case, was enrolled in second-line treatment. The patient remained culture positive and was subsequently diagnosed as a pre-XDR TB case, and after 5 months of second-line treatment, bedaquiline, clofazimine, and linezolid were added to the regimen. The patient continued to be culture positive, and 6 months later, delamanid was also added to the regimen; ultimately, treatment failure was declared. The first increase in bedaquiline MIC was seen at the fourth month of treatment (0.5 mg·liter−1 in 7H11) concomitantly with WGS analysis showing an insertion (Ins) at nucleotide position 141 to 142 of Rv0678 (genomic position 779130). At month 9, the isolate became resistant to delamanid (MIC >1 mg·liter−1) (data not shown). WGS analysis confirmed the presence of the Rv0678 mutation and also showed a mutation in fgd1 (G104S), probably responsible for delamanid resistance. Patients 2 and 3 had MDR TB with a history of failed second-line treatment taken for 20 and 17 months, respectively, both were then re-enrolled on a bedaquiline- and clofazimine-containing regimen. For both patients, no difference was seen in the bedaquiline MIC between the baseline isolate and the isolates collected after two and one month of bedaquiline-containing treatment. A subsequent isolate from patient 2 at the fifth month of treatment became resistant to both bedaquiline and clofazimine, and WGS analysis showed the appearance of an insertion at position 141 to 142 of Rv0678. Similarly, isolate from patient 3 after 6 months of bedaquiline showed 8- and 4-fold increases in bedaquiline and clofazimine MICs in mycobacterial growth indicator tubes (MGITs), and a V20G mutation in Rv0678 was detected. Moreover, the M. tuberculosis strains from patient 2 at baseline and at two and five months of treatment carried a P478G mutation in Rv1979c, suggesting that this mutation has no effect on clofazimine resistance. Patients 4, 5, and 6 were XDR TB cases failing a second-line treatment regimen containing clofazimine administered for 20, 14, and 12 months, respectively. Baseline isolates of all three cases had a bedaquiline MIC of 0.03 mg·liter−1 in 7H11 and showed no detectable mutations in Rv0678, pepQ, atpE, and Rv1979c. The follow-up isolates from patients 4 and 5 collected at months 6 and 5 during treatment showed an increase in bedaquiline and clofazimine MIC associated with an insertion at position 138 to 139 of Rv0678 (genomic position 779127). Patient 6 showed a substantial increase in MICs for both bedaquiline and clofazimine (8-fold for bedaquiline, 4-fold for clofazimine) after 1 month of therapy, and we detected an insertion in Rv0678 at a variant frequency of 12.7% that was not present at baseline. This patient ultimately failed treatment. Breakpoints for bedaquiline are still provisional (12, 13), and patients are started on treatment without susceptibility tests. We adopted 0.25 mg·liter−1 as the susceptibility breakpoint in 7H10 and 7H11 (14, 15), which is above the MIC that inhibits 90% of the isolates or strains (0.125 mg·liter−1). However, with this breakpoint, the strains collected from two patients reported as “failures” at the end of treatment (patient 4, MIC of 0.25 mg·liter−1, 8-fold higher than baseline; and patient 5, MIC of 0.125 mg·liter−1, 4-fold higher than baseline) would have been categorized as susceptible. This finding indicates that monitoring MICs during treatment could be a better predictor for failure than single testing at the critical concentration. The genetic basis of resistance to bedaquiline is still the subject of much uncertainty. WGS analyses in different studies showed that bedaquiline-clofazimine cross-resistance arises through mutations in Rv0678 (8, 9, 10) and pepQ (11). In this study, we show that the increase in the MICs to bedaquiline and clofazimine could be explained by mutations in Rv0678 emerging during therapy. As reported in Table 1, we observed four different mutations, and three of these (138-139_Ins-G, 141-142_Ins-C, and 192-193_Ins-G) were previously reported as associated with bedaquiline resistance in M. tuberculosis clinical strains (10, 16). We show that the same mutations are associated with clofazimine resistance. As a result, regimens that contain both drugs might have to be reconsidered when these mutations are identified in order to reduce the risk of treatment failure for patients and the transmission of such strains in the community. Altogether, these data show that resistance to bedaquiline emerges during treatment and emphasize the importance of using MIC coupled, whenever possible, with WGS in national programs implementing bedaquiline for the treatment of MDR/XDR TB to monitor the emergence of resistance. Moreover, the collection of genomic data on mutations associated with bedaquiline and clofazimine resistance is crucial to lead future development of tools for fast detection of resistance. Introducing drugs without proper diagnostics to monitor drug resistance may lead to the amplification of hardly treatable cases.

Accession number(s).

Raw sequencing reads have been deposited at BioProject at NCBI (project accession number PRJNA540911).
  12 in total

1.  The changing treatment landscape for MDR/XDR-TB - Can current clinical trials revolutionise and inform a brave new world?

Authors:  Isobella Honeyborne; Marc Lipman; Alimuddin Zumla; Timothy D McHugh
Journal:  Int J Infect Dis       Date:  2019-02-15       Impact factor: 3.623

2.  Surveillance of adverse events in the treatment of drug-resistant tuberculosis: A global feasibility study.

Authors:  Onno Akkerman; Alena Aleksa; Jan-Willem Alffenaar; Nada Hassan Al-Marzouqi; Miguel Arias-Guillén; Evgeny Belilovski; Enrique Bernal; Martin J Boeree; Sergey E Borisov; Judith Bruchfeld; Julen Cadiñanos Loidi; Qingshan Cai; Jose A Caminero; Jose Joaquín Cebrian Gallardo; Rosella Centis; Luigi Ruffo Codecasa; Lia D'Ambrosio; Margareth Dalcolmo; Edvardas Danila; Masoud Dara; Edita Davidavičienė; Lina Davies Forsman; Jorge De Los Rios Jefe; Justin Denholm; Raquel Duarte; Seifeldin Eltaeb Elamin; Maurizio Ferrarese; Alexey Filippov; Shashank Ganatra; Ana Garcia; José-María García-García; Regina Gayoso; Angela Maria Giraldo Montoya; Roscio Gomez Gomez Rosso; Gina Gualano; Wouter Hoefsloot; Biljana Ilievska-Poposka; Jerker Jonsson; Elena Khimova; Liga Kuksa; Heinke Kunst; Rafael Laniado-Laborín; Yang Li; Cecile Magis-Escurra; Vinicio Manfrin; Selene Manga; Valentina Marchese; Elena Martínez Robles; Andrei Maryandyshev; Alberto Matteelli; Giovanni Battista Migliori; Jai B Mullerpattan; Marcela Munoz-Torrico; Hamdan Mustafa Hamdan; Magnolia Nieto Marcos; Noorliza Mohamad Noordin; Domingo Juan Palmero; Fabrizio Palmieri; Marie-Christine Payen; Alberto Piubello; Emanuele Pontali; Agostina Pontarelli; Sarai Quirós; Adrian Rendon; Alena Skrahina; Agnese Šmite; Ivan Solovic; Giovanni Sotgiu; Mahamadou Bassirou Souleymane; Antonio Spanevello; Maja Stošić; Marina Tadolini; Simon Tiberi; Zarir Farokh Udwadia; Martin van den Boom; Marisa Vescovo; Pietro Viggiani; Dina Visca; Dmitry Zhurkin; Matteo Zignol
Journal:  Int J Infect Dis       Date:  2019-04-03       Impact factor: 3.623

3.  Cross-resistance between clofazimine and bedaquiline through upregulation of MmpL5 in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Authors:  Ruben C Hartkoorn; Swapna Uplekar; Stewart T Cole
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2014-03-03       Impact factor: 5.191

4.  Effectiveness and safety of bedaquiline-containing regimens in the treatment of MDR- and XDR-TB: a multicentre study.

Authors:  Sergey E Borisov; Keertan Dheda; Martin Enwerem; Rodolfo Romero Leyet; Lia D'Ambrosio; Rosella Centis; Giovanni Sotgiu; Simon Tiberi; Jan-Willem Alffenaar; Andrey Maryandyshev; Evgeny Belilovski; Shashank Ganatra; Alena Skrahina; Onno Akkerman; Alena Aleksa; Rohit Amale; Janina Artsukevich; Judith Bruchfeld; Jose A Caminero; Isabel Carpena Martinez; Luigi Codecasa; Margareth Dalcolmo; Justin Denholm; Paul Douglas; Raquel Duarte; Aliasgar Esmail; Mohammed Fadul; Alexey Filippov; Lina Davies Forsman; Mina Gaga; Julia-Amaranta Garcia-Fuertes; José-María García-García; Gina Gualano; Jerker Jonsson; Heinke Kunst; Jillian S Lau; Barbara Lazaro Mastrapa; Jorge Lazaro Teran Troya; Selene Manga; Katerina Manika; Pablo González Montaner; Jai Mullerpattan; Suzette Oelofse; Martina Ortelli; Domingo Juan Palmero; Fabrizio Palmieri; Antonella Papalia; Apostolos Papavasileiou; Marie-Christine Payen; Emanuele Pontali; Carlos Robalo Cordeiro; Laura Saderi; Tsetan Dorji Sadutshang; Tatsiana Sanukevich; Varvara Solodovnikova; Antonio Spanevello; Sonam Topgyal; Federica Toscanini; Adrian R Tramontana; Zarir Farokh Udwadia; Pietro Viggiani; Veronica White; Alimuddin Zumla; Giovanni Battista Migliori
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2017-05-21       Impact factor: 16.671

5.  Mutations in pepQ Confer Low-Level Resistance to Bedaquiline and Clofazimine in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Authors:  Deepak Almeida; Thomas Ioerger; Sandeep Tyagi; Si-Yang Li; Khisimuzi Mdluli; Koen Andries; Jacques Grosset; Jim Sacchettini; Eric Nuermberger
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2016-07-22       Impact factor: 5.191

6.  Effect of bedaquiline on mortality in South African patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis: a retrospective cohort study.

Authors:  Kathryn Schnippel; Norbert Ndjeka; Gary Maartens; Graeme Meintjes; Iqbal Master; Nazir Ismail; Jennifer Hughes; Hannetjie Ferreira; Xavier Padanilam; Rodolfo Romero; Julian Te Riele; Francesca Conradie
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2018-07-11       Impact factor: 30.700

7.  Delamanid and Bedaquiline Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Ancestral Beijing Genotype Causing Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis in a Tibetan Refugee.

Authors:  Harald Hoffmann; Thomas A Kohl; Sabine Hofmann-Thiel; Matthias Merker; Patrick Beckert; Katia Jaton; Lubov Nedialkova; Evgeni Sahalchyk; Thomas Rothe; Peter M Keller; Stefan Niemann
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2016-02-01       Impact factor: 21.405

8.  MTBseq: a comprehensive pipeline for whole genome sequence analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex isolates.

Authors:  Thomas Andreas Kohl; Christian Utpatel; Viola Schleusener; Maria Rosaria De Filippo; Patrick Beckert; Daniela Maria Cirillo; Stefan Niemann
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2018-11-13       Impact factor: 2.984

9.  Bedaquiline Microheteroresistance after Cessation of Tuberculosis Treatment.

Authors:  Margaretha de Vos; Serej D Ley; Kristin B Wiggins; Brigitta Derendinger; Anzaan Dippenaar; Melanie Grobbelaar; Anja Reuter; Tania Dolby; Scott Burns; Marco Schito; David M Engelthaler; John Metcalfe; Grant Theron; Annelies van Rie; James Posey; Rob Warren; Helen Cox
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2019-05-30       Impact factor: 91.245

10.  Defining Bedaquiline Susceptibility, Resistance, Cross-Resistance and Associated Genetic Determinants: A Retrospective Cohort Study.

Authors:  Nazir A Ismail; Shaheed V Omar; Lavania Joseph; Netricia Govender; Linsay Blows; Farzana Ismail; Hendrik Koornhof; Andries W Dreyer; Koné Kaniga; Norbert Ndjeka
Journal:  EBioMedicine       Date:  2018-01-09       Impact factor: 8.143

View more
  18 in total

1.  A Multimethod, Multicountry Evaluation of Breakpoints for Bedaquiline Resistance Determination.

Authors:  Koné Kaniga; Shaheed V Omar; Nazir Ahmed Ismail; Akio Aono; Emanuele Borroni; Daniela Maria Cirillo; Christel Desmaretz; Rumina Hasan; Satoshi Mitarai; Sadia Shakoor; Gabriela Torrea
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2020-08-20       Impact factor: 5.191

2.  Characterization of Genomic Variants Associated with Resistance to Bedaquiline and Delamanid in Naive Mycobacterium tuberculosis Clinical Strains.

Authors:  S Battaglia; A Spitaleri; A M Cabibbe; C J Meehan; C Utpatel; N Ismail; S Tahseen; A Skrahina; N Alikhanova; S M Mostofa Kamal; A Barbova; S Niemann; R Groenheit; A S Dean; M Zignol; L Rigouts; D M Cirillo
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2020-10-21       Impact factor: 5.948

3.  Role of Epistasis in Amikacin, Kanamycin, Bedaquiline, and Clofazimine Resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Complex.

Authors:  Roger Vargas; Luca Freschi; Andrea Spitaleri; Sabira Tahseen; Ivan Barilar; Stefan Niemann; Paolo Miotto; Daniela Maria Cirillo; Claudio U Köser; Maha R Farhat
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2021-08-30       Impact factor: 5.938

4.  Acquired bedaquiline resistance in Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan.

Authors:  P Nair; T Hasan; K K Zaw; S Allamuratova; A Ismailov; P Mendonca; Z Bekbaev; N Parpieva; J Singh; N Sitali; E Bermudez-Aza; A Sinha
Journal:  Int J Tuberc Lung Dis       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 3.427

5.  Identification of Potential Binders of Mtb Universal Stress Protein (Rv1636) Through an in silico Approach and Insights Into Compound Selection for Experimental Validation.

Authors:  Sohini Chakraborti; Moubani Chakraborty; Avipsa Bose; Narayanaswamy Srinivasan; Sandhya S Visweswariah
Journal:  Front Mol Biosci       Date:  2021-05-03

6.  Population-level emergence of bedaquiline and clofazimine resistance-associated variants among patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis in southern Africa: a phenotypic and phylogenetic analysis.

Authors:  Camus Nimmo; James Millard; Lucy van Dorp; Kayleen Brien; Sashen Moodley; Allison Wolf; Alison D Grant; Nesri Padayatchi; Alexander S Pym; François Balloux; Max O'Donnell
Journal:  Lancet Microbe       Date:  2020-08

7.  Genetic variants and their association with phenotypic resistance to bedaquiline in Mycobacterium tuberculosis: a systematic review and individual isolate data analysis.

Authors:  Nabila Ismail; Emmanuel Rivière; Jason Limberis; Stella Huo; John Z Metcalfe; Rob M Warren; Annelies Van Rie
Journal:  Lancet Microbe       Date:  2021-08-31

Review 8.  Whole Genome Sequencing for the Analysis of Drug Resistant Strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis: A Systematic Review for Bedaquiline and Delamanid.

Authors:  Luisa Maria Nieto Ramirez; Karina Quintero Vargas; Gustavo Diaz
Journal:  Antibiotics (Basel)       Date:  2020-03-23

Review 9.  Short-Course Regimen for Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis: A Decade of Evidence.

Authors:  Arnaud Trébucq; Tom Decroo; Armand Van Deun; Alberto Piubello; Chen-Yuan Chiang; Kobto G Koura; Valérie Schwoebel
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2019-12-25       Impact factor: 4.241

10.  Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex lineage 5 exhibits high levels of within-lineage genomic diversity and differing gene content compared to the type strain H37Rv.

Authors:  C N'Dira Sanoussi; Mireia Coscolla; Boatema Ofori-Anyinam; Isaac Darko Otchere; Martin Antonio; Stefan Niemann; Julian Parkhill; Simon Harris; Dorothy Yeboah-Manu; Sebastien Gagneux; Leen Rigouts; Dissou Affolabi; Bouke C de Jong; Conor J Meehan
Journal:  Microb Genom       Date:  2021-07
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.