Gaydos Charlotte A
Division of Infectious Diseases, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Infect Dis. 2017 Jul 15;216(suppl_2):S406-S411. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jix104.
Mycoplasma genitalium is very difficult to grow in culture but has been more able to be studied for disease associations since the advent of research molecular amplification assays. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and other molecular assays have demonstrated an association with adverse disease outcomes, such as urethritis or nongonococcal urethritis in men and adverse reproductive sequelae in women-for example, cervicitis, endometritis, and pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), including an association with risk for human immunodeficiency virus. The lack of commercially available diagnostic assays has limited widespread routine testing. Increasing reports of high rates of resistance to azithromycin detected in research studies have heightened the need available commercial diagnostic assays as well as standardized methods for detecting resistance markers. This review covers available molecular methods for the diagnosis of M. genitalium and assays to predict the antibiotic susceptibility to azithromycin.
A PubMed (US National Library of Medicine and National Institutes of Health) search was conducted for literature published between 2000 and 2016, using the search terms Mycoplasma genitalium, M. genitalium, diagnosis, and detection.
Early PCR diagnostic tests focused on the MPa adhesion gene and the 16S ribosomal RNA gene. Subsequently, a transcription-mediated amplification assay targeting ribosomes was developed and widely used to study the epidemiology of M. genitalium. Newer methods have proliferated and include quantitative PCR for organism load, AmpliSens PCR, PCR for the pdhD gene, a PCR-based microarray for multiple sexually transmitted infections, and multiplex PCRs. None yet are cleared by the Food and Drug Administration in the United States, although several assays are CE marked in Europe. As well, many research assays, including PCR, gene sequencing, and melt curve analysis, have been developed to detect the 23S ribosomal RNA gene mutations that confer resistance to azithromycin. One recently developed assay can test for both M. genitalium and azithromycin resistance mutations at the same time.
It is recommended that more commercial assays to both diagnose this organism and guide treatment choices should be developed and made available through regulatory approval. Research is needed to establish the cost-effectiveness of routine M. genitalium testing in symptomatic patients and screening in all individuals at high risk of acquiring and transmitting sexually transmitted infections.
生殖支原体在培养中极难生长,但自研究性分子扩增检测方法问世以来,对其疾病关联的研究更具可行性。聚合酶链反应(PCR)及其他分子检测方法已证实其与不良疾病结局相关,如男性尿道炎或非淋菌性尿道炎,以及女性不良生殖后遗症,如宫颈炎、子宫内膜炎和盆腔炎(PID),包括与人类免疫缺陷病毒感染风险的关联。缺乏可商购的诊断检测方法限制了广泛的常规检测。研究中越来越多关于对阿奇霉素高耐药率的报道,凸显了对可商购诊断检测方法以及检测耐药标志物标准化方法的需求。本综述涵盖了用于诊断生殖支原体的现有分子方法以及预测对阿奇霉素抗生素敏感性的检测方法。
在PubMed(美国国立医学图书馆和国立卫生研究院)中检索2000年至2016年间发表的文献,检索词为生殖支原体、M. genitalium、诊断和检测。
早期的PCR诊断测试聚焦于MPa黏附基因和16S核糖体RNA基因。随后,一种靶向核糖体的转录介导扩增检测方法被开发出来并广泛用于研究生殖支原体的流行病学。更新的方法不断涌现,包括用于检测病原体载量的定量PCR、AmpliSens PCR、针对pdhD基因的PCR、用于多种性传播感染的基于PCR的微阵列以及多重PCR。在美国,尚无一种检测方法获得食品药品监督管理局的批准,不过在欧洲有几种检测方法获得了CE标志。同样,许多研究性检测方法,包括PCR、基因测序和熔解曲线分析,已被开发用于检测赋予对阿奇霉素耐药性的23S核糖体RNA基因突变。最近开发的一种检测方法可同时检测生殖支原体和阿奇霉素耐药突变。
建议开发更多用于诊断该病原体并指导治疗选择的商业检测方法,并通过监管批准使其可用。需要开展研究以确定对有症状患者进行生殖支原体常规检测以及对所有有获得和传播性传播感染高风险的个体进行筛查的成本效益。