News

M. genitalium demands new STI treatment strategy


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE STI & AIDS WORLD CONGRESS 2013

If the urethritis persists 2 weeks later, Dr. Horner recommended treating patients empirically with a combination of moxifloxacin and metronidazole to cover possible infection by either M. genitalium or U. urealyticum.

In theory, this overall approach has the potential to resolve 89% of infections after the first round of treatment and 99% after the second round, with low potential for generating resistant strains of M. genitalium, based on pathogen prevalence and susceptibility profiles that Dr. Horner sees in Bristol. Those outcomes are an improvement on the cure rates and resistance risks when initial treatment is applied completely empirically, he explained.

Infection-specific treatment would work even better once rapid, point-of-care genetic tests become available for M. genitalium and U. urealyticum, Dr. Horner said.

Dr. Manhart, Dr. Wiesenfeld, and Dr. Hillier had no disclosures. Dr. Jensen said that his institution provides diagnostic testing for M. genitalium commercially and also evaluates various new antimicrobials under contract. Dr. Horner said that he has been a consultant to or received research support from Aquarius Population Health, Cepheid, Hologic, and Siemens.

mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

Pages

Recommended Reading

Pregnancy sepsis score identifies safe ED discharges
MDedge ObGyn
No increased birth defect risk found with oral fluconazole, with one exception
MDedge ObGyn
The push is on for universal influenza vaccines
MDedge ObGyn
Metronidazole needed for complete pelvic inflammatory disease coverage
MDedge ObGyn
High-dose intravaginal metronidazole/miconazole may help BV
MDedge ObGyn
Single-dose oritavancin shows efficacy against skin infections
MDedge ObGyn
Dalbavancin stands up to severe skin infections
MDedge ObGyn
Biweekly 5-fluorouracil cream beat back cervical neoplasia
MDedge ObGyn
Stats show MRSA declining, especially in hospitals
MDedge ObGyn
New Candida species isolated in U.S.
MDedge ObGyn