Abstract
The demand for reliable drug-susceptibility testing (DST) increases with the expansion of antituberculosis drug-resistance surveillance, and with the need for an appropriate treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, whose incidence gradually increases in many parts of the world. However, the reliability of DST results obtained through widely used methods does not meet acceptable levels, except for DST to isoniazid and rifampicin.
In general, susceptibility results are highly predictable, while resistance results show low predictive values when the resistance prevalence is <10%. Poor reliability stems from a weak correlation with clinical response and a low reproducibility due to the poor standardisation of the complex and fragile test procedures. Therefore, in vitro criteria of resistance for susceptibility testing should be carefully determined with representative clinical samples of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from patients never treated with any antituberculosis drug, and from patients having failed treatment with a regimen containing the tested drug; DST should then be carefully standardised to obtain reproducible results.
The critical concentration of some drugs is close to the minimal inhibitory concentration for wild susceptible strains and, thus, drug-susceptibility testing is prone to yield poorly reproducible results. These issues call for physicians' attention when using the results from drug-susceptibility testing for case management.
SERIES “CONTROVERSIAL ISSUES IN TUBERCULOSIS”
Edited by A. Torres and J. Caminero
Number 4 in this Series
In many countries, the wide use of the standard short-course regimen has led to an increasing incidence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB), defined as resistance to at least isoniazid (INH) and rifampicin (RFP) 1–3. Significant high rates of MDR-TB were observed in some parts of the world, not only among previously treated TB patients, due to poor case management, but also among new cases due to transmission in the community. The situation has turned into a pressing demand for drug-susceptibility testing (DST) in order to accomplish drug-resistance surveillance (DRS), and also to develop efficient regimens for appropriate treatment of individual cases.SERIES “CONTROVERSIAL ISSUES IN TUBERCULOSIS” Edited by A. Torres and J. Caminero Number 4 in this Series
As a result of inappropriate and/or inadequate treatment, drug resistance emerges by selective multiplication of resistant mutants within the lesions, in spite of the presence of growth-inhibitory concentrations of a drug. The frequency of drug-resistant mutants and their resistance levels vary depending on the drug and the mutated genes and sites, whose phenotypic expressions include the following: alterations of the binding site of drug-target molecules; loss of enzymes activating drug molecules; permeability changes to the drug, including efflux; and production of drug-inactivating enzymes, such as β-lactamase. There are a variety of methods to determine the susceptibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to antituberculosis drugs, but none of them is perfect, and their results do not satisfy clinicians for the effective treatment of TB patients.
Most of the currently used DST methods suffer from low predictability associated with clinical irrelevance of the results and from unacceptable low reliability resulting from poor reproducibility. This review focuses on general features of DST methods concerning the clinical relevance and the reproducibility of the technique.
DRUG-SUSCEPTIBILITY TESTING METHODS
Drug susceptibility of M. tuberculosis can be determined either by observation of growth or metabolic inhibition in a medium containing antituberculosis drug, or by detection, at the molecular level, of mutations in the genes related to drug action. From a technical standpoint, drug susceptibility is determined on the basis of growth (or metabolic) inhibition induced by the drug by means of: 1) macroscopic observation of growth in drug-free and drug-containing media; 2) detection or measurement of the metabolic activity or products; 3) lysis with mycobacteriophage; and 4) detection of genetic mutations using molecular techniques.
Conventional culture methods using egg- or agar-based media are still the most utilised in many countries 4, 5. Although the long turnaround time of DST results displeases physicians for the purpose of case management, it is suitable for DRS. The standard methods using Löwenstein–Jensen medium include the proportion method, the absolute concentration method and the resistant ratio method, which are fairly well standardised with clinical samples, at least for the major antituberculosis drugs 4. Among conventional methods, the proportion method is the most preferred choice, but the absolute concentration method is also commonly used on account of its technical simplicity for inoculum preparation and for reading the results.
In order to shorten the turnaround time and make it more convenient for case management, numerous new techniques have appeared, aiming to detect growth inhibition as early as possible. The most commonly used systems are detection of CO2 production, such as BACTEC 460 6 or MB/Bact 7, and oxygen consumption, such as Mycobacteria Growth Indicator Tube 8; there are others in developmental stage, such as oxidation–reduction indicators like resazurin or tetrazolium bromide 9, 10 and the phage-based techniques 11, 12. Particle-counting immunoassay 13 can also curtail turnaround times by detecting a low-level multiplication of M. tuberculosis. Many of those new techniques are difficult to implement in the countries where they are needed the most, because of high costs, technical complexity and absence of appropriately trained human resources. In addition, they still need clinical evaluation to verify their claimed efficiency under various settings. Most of all, none of these techniques has been well calibrated with representative clinical samples of M. tuberculosis in order to determine the clinically relevant criteria of resistance (i.e. cut-off points).
There are numerous reports on molecular techniques to detect gene mutations related to resistance, including hybridisation 14–20 of amplified gene segments or other PCR-based methods. However, not all resistance-related genes for the different antituberculosis drugs and their sites of mutation have been found, except for rpoB gene mutations, which lead to RFP resistance. These molecular techniques normally require primary amplification, and, therefore, when they are used on a routine basis for long periods of time, they are not free from false results due to contaminating amplicons and/or chromosomal DNA.
RELIABILITY OF DRUG-SUSCEPTIBILITY TEST RESULTS
The World Health Organization and the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease established the Supranational TB Reference Laboratory Network through which they intend to assure DST proficiency testing in countries implementing DRS 1–3. Proficiency testing results from nine rounds, undertaken during 1994–2002, showed that average sensitivities to detect resistance to INH, RFP, streptomycin (SM) and ethambutol (EMB) were 98.7%, 97.2%, 90.8% and 89.3%, respectively 3. The corresponding sensitivities to detect susceptibility to INH, RFP, SM and EMB were 98.5%, 96.8%, 93.9% and 94.0%, respectively 3. The predictive values of the susceptibility DST results, which have been calculated on the basis of the aforementioned figures, were high for all four drugs (>93%), even at 40% prevalence, while predictive values of the resistance DST results varied greatly between the four major drugs (figs 1⇓ and 2⇓). Below 10% prevalence of resistance, the predictive values for EMB and SM were significantly lower than those for INH and RFP. The predictive value of resistance, at the median prevalences of resistance to specific drugs among the pulmonary TB patients, as has been previously published 3, was 80.6% for INH at a 5.9% median resistance prevalence, 30.4% for RFP at 1.4%, 50.0% for SM at 6.3%, and 10.4% for EMB at 0.8%. Among previously treated cases, predictive values were, of course, higher due to higher median prevalence of resistance, as follows: 91.6% for INH at a 14.4% median prevalence; 74.6% for RFP at 8.4%; 65.8% for SM at 11.4%; and 34.8% for EMB at 3.5%. It is clear that resistance results for EMB and SM are less reliable than those for INH and RFP. Similar findings were obtained through rapid growth-detection systems 8.
FACTORS INFLUENCING DRUG-SUSCEPTIBILITY TEST RESULTS
DST methods and the interpretation of their results vary greatly; however, it is noteworthy that, in order to obtain clinically relevant and dependable results for case management, the probability of misclassification of clinically susceptible or clinically resistant strains must be minimal or absent. Aiming to meet this requirement, it has been suggested to fix the criteria at the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and 1% of the critical resistant proportion of M. tuberculosis strains isolated from never-treated patients 4, 21. However, primary drug resistances, including natural resistance, would interfere with this approach. Another method would be the comparison of clinical responses of strains bearing all the possible levels of resistance, in order to find the clinically relevant critical level of resistance. This approach may seem ideal, but it is not realistic. For this reason, it is recommended to determine in vitro criteria, which could be used to predict clinical resistance and susceptibility with acceptable accuracy, by testing well-defined and representative clinical strains of M. tuberculosis 4, 22 isolated from patients treated under well-controlled and properly recorded clinical settings. The DST method under evaluation should be calibrated by comparing the MIC of probably susceptible (PS) strains, derived from never-treated patients, with the MIC of probably resistant (PR) strains, derived from patients who apparently had treatment failure with regimens containing the corresponding drug. The difference in cumulative susceptible percentages between PS and PR clinical isolates (at various concentrations) was greater at 0.2 µg·mL−1 with INH and at 40.0 µg·mL−1 with RFP 23; discrimination power values were 75.8% and 85.8%, respectively (figs 3⇓ and 4⇓). At the same concentrations, the 1% critical resistant proportion could discriminate PS and PR most reasonably for both drugs, showing a discrimination power of 77.1% for INH and 85.6% for RFP 23. Mitchison 24 found that SM-resistant strains were discriminated from susceptible strains at 16 µg·mL−1 with a difference of 52.4%. Lefford and Mitchison 22 reported that ethionamide (ETH) resistance was discriminated at 40.0 µg·mL−1 with a 46.7% difference. It is also interesting to notice that most reasonable criteria of resistance could be different between laboratories, even when they apply the same method. EMB PR strains have been discriminated from PS strains at 2 µg·mL−1 in the laboratory of the Korean Institute of Tuberculosis, Seoul, South Korea, while they were better distinguished at 4 µg·mL−1 in the laboratory of the Royal Postgraduate Medical School, London, UK, using the same medium and method, and testing the same PR strains (personal communication, D.A. Mitchison, Medical Research Council Unit for Laboratory Studies of Tuberculosis, Royal Postgraduate Medical School, Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK; fig. 5⇓). These data seem to indicate that differences in critical concentration might have resulted from different susceptibility levels of PS strains and disparities in the test environment. Resistance levels of PR strains vary greatly, except to RFP; therefore, it is not possible to determine a reasonable cut-off point without a careful calibration of susceptibility with PS strains. Those studies clearly show that the discrimination between PR and PS strains is more reliable for INH and RFP than for other drugs. It is also clear that the development of a DST method capable of distinguishing PR and PS strains at 100% is, in fact, not feasible because of the technical variations resulting from the physicochemically labile environment of the test.
A recent survey on the current practices for DST to second-line drugs at 10 Supranational Reference Laboratories revealed important differences with regards to the critical concentrations of drugs and the critical proportions of resistance 25, underlining the need to standardise the methods and criteria with the purpose of optimising the clinical relevance of DST results.
Development of drug resistance by selective multiplication of resistant mutants existing in a wild bacillary population is determined by the initial size of actively multiplying organisms in the lesions, the drug exposure time and the drug concentration 4, 24, 26, 27. The absorption, the diffusion into the lesions and the maintenance level of a drug are all important factors for the emergence of drug resistance. INH and RFP, whose susceptibility testing results are fairly reliable, show a peak serum concentration over 100-times higher than the MIC, and it is certainly possible to maintain them at a fairly high concentration in the lesions throughout the treatment, unless the patient interrupts drug intake (fig. 6⇓) 27, 28. Conversely, peak serum levels of cycloserine, EMB, ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin and ETH are closer to MICs (fig. 6⇓). As a consequence, in some patients, the period of inhibitory concentration of the drug within the lesions may be short and/or the drug level may remain subinhibitory during most of the time. In general, DST results to the latter drugs display low reliability.
Many of the newly developed DST methods have not been carefully calibrated to determine in vitro criteria of resistance with appropriate clinical samples, representative of the patient's clinical outcome under the current clinical settings; instead, these criteria have often been arbitrarily chosen using laboratory strains. Unless a careful calibration is carried out, the clinical relevance of DST results remains uncertain.
Reproducibility of in vitro DST results is influenced to a great extent by the physicochemical environment of the test 4, 28, which requires appropriate standardisation and control of the test procedure. Poor reproducibility usually stems from the procedural complexity; thus, it can be improved through procedural simplification.
Appropriate standardisation of inoculum preparation is an important prerequisite to obtain reliable DST results, since the number (size), dispersion and viability of the organisms in the inoculum have a significant effect on DST results. Frequent subcultures may distort drug-susceptibility levels and patterns of strains, when compared with those from the primary cultures. Culture media must allow an adequate growth of all the inoculated organisms; however, when they contain some antagonistic compounds or chemicals interfering with the drug action, results will be unreliable, unless these substances are removed or minimised. Variations in the concentration of the drug incorporated to the medium originate from protein binding, heat inactivation, loss of various amounts of drug during filter sterilisation, incomplete dissolution due to the use of improper solvents, inaccurate calculation of potency, and inaccurate dilution. Medium pH, incubation temperature and incubation time are also important factors that influence DST results. A careful standardisation and the control of these test-environment physicochemical factors are essential to achieve acceptable reproducibility of DST results.
CONCLUSION
Drug-susceptibility testing is still widely used as a tool for the selection of effective regimens to successfully treat tuberculosis patients (particularly multidrug-resistant tuberculosis), as well as for evaluation of programme efficiency and development of strategies to cope with the problem of drug-resistant tuberculosis. However, to provide reliable results, the drug-susceptibility testing method under evaluation for routine use must be carefully calibrated with representative clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains, in order to determine in vitro test criteria, which could be used to predict, at best, the patient's clinical outcome. The test procedure has to then be standardised with maximal simplification to yield results with acceptable reproducibility regarding these criteria.
Footnotes
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Previous articles in this series: No. 1: Cardona P-J, Ruiz-Manzano J. On the nature of Mycobacterium tuberculosis-latent bacilli. Eur Respir J 2004; 24: 1044–1051. No. 2: Rieder H. Annual risk of infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Eur Respir J 2005; 25: 181–185. No. 3: Mitchison DA. Drug resistance in tuberculosis. Eur Respir J 2005; 25: 376–379.
- Received September 25, 2004.
- Accepted October 6, 2004.
- © ERS Journals Ltd