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Volume 27, Number 3—March 2021
Dispatch

Bedaquiline as Treatment for Disseminated Nontuberculous Mycobacteria Infection in 2 Patients Co-Infected with HIV

Eliza GilComments to Author , Nicola Sweeney, Veronica Barrett, Stephen Morris-Jones, Robert F. Miller, Victoria J. Johnston, and Michael Brown
Author affiliations: University College London Hospitals, National Health Service Foundation Trust, London, UK (E. Gil, N. Sweeney, V. Barrett, S. Morris-Jones, V.J. Johnston, M. Brown); Central and North West London National Health Service Foundation Trust, London (R.F. Miller); University College London, London (R.F. Miller); London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London (R.F. Miller, V.J. Johnston, M. Brown)

Main Article

Table 2

MICs and CLSI interpretation as reported by Public Health England reference laboratory for all drugs tested against Mycobacterium abscessus isolate from case-patient 2 (5)*

Drug MIC, mg/L CLSI interpretation
Amikacin intravenous >64 Resistant
Ciprofloxacin >16 No defined breakpoints
Clarithromycin Not reported Month 0: sensitive; month 6: high-level resistance
Doxycycline >16 No defined breakpoints
Ethambutol >16 No defined breakpoints
Linezolid 64 Resistant
Moxifloxacin >8 Resistant
Rifampin >8 No defined breakpoints

*MICs were calculated for the isolate at the initial presentation (month 0) of the patient and again at his representation 6 mo later. The second testing identified a new high level of resistance. CLSI, Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute.

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Page updated: February 21, 2021
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