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Antimicrobial Susceptibility of Commensal Neisseria in the General Population and Men Who Have Sex with Men in Belgium: A Cross Sectional Survey

33 Pages Posted: 6 Sep 2021

See all articles by Jolein Laumen

Jolein Laumen

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM)

Christophe Van Dijck

University of Antwerp - Department of Clinical Sciences

Said Abdellati

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM)

Irith De Baetselier

University of Antwerp - Department of Clinical Sciences

Gabriela Serrano

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM)

Sheeba Manoharan-Basil

Emmanuel Bottieau

University of Antwerp - Department of Clinical Sciences

Delphine Martiny

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM)

Chris Kenyon

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM)

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Abstract

Background: Non-pathogenic Neisseria are a reservoir of antimicrobial resistance genes for pathogenic Neisseria meningitidis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Men who have sex with men (MSM) are at risk of colonization/infection with resistant non-pathogenic and pathogenic Neisseria. We assessed if the antimicrobial susceptibility of non-pathogenic Neisseria among MSM differs from the general population and if antimicrobial exposure impacts susceptibility.

Methods: We recruited 96 participants at a sexually transmitted infections clinic in Antwerp, Belgium: 32 clinic employees and 32 MSM who did not use antibiotics in the previous 6 months, and 32 MSM who did. Oropharyngeal Neisseria were cultured and identified with MALDI-TOF-MS. Minimum inhibitory concentrations for azithromycin, ceftriaxone and ciprofloxacin were determined using E-tests ® and compared between groups with non-parametric tests.

Findings: Non-pathogenic Neisseria from employees as well as MSM were remarkably resistant. Those from MSM were significantly less susceptible than employees to azithromycin (median 7·0 mg/L, IQR 3·0 – 280·2 versus 3·0 mg/L, IQR 2·0 – 4·0, p <0·0001) and ciprofloxacin (0·250 mg/L, IQR 0·020 – 0·380 versus 0·023 mg/L, IQR 0·012 – 0·064, p <0·001), but not ceftriaxone (0·047 mg/L, IQR 0·032 – 0·084 versus 0·034, IQR 0·026 – 0·064, p =0·3). Susceptibility did not differ significantly according to recent antimicrobial exposure in MSM.

Interpretation: Surveilling antimicrobial susceptibility of non-pathogenic Neisseria may be a sensitive way to assess impact of antimicrobial exposure in a population. The high levels of antimicrobial resistance in this survey indicate that novel resistance determinants may be readily available for future transfer from non-pathogenic to pathogenic Neisseria.

Funding: Belgian Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO 121.00).

Declaration of Interests: All authors declare no conflicts of interested related to this work.

Ethics Approval Statement: Ethics approval was obtained from ITM’s Institutional Review Board (1276/18 and 1351/20) and from the Ethics Committee of the University of Antwerp (19/06/058 and AB/ac/003).

Keywords: Neisseria, commensal, gonorrhoea, oropharynx, horizontal gene transfer, observational study, men who have sex with men

Suggested Citation

Laumen, Jolein and Van Dijck, Christophe and Abdellati, Said and De Baetselier, Irith and Serrano, Gabriela and Manoharan-Basil, Sheeba and Bottieau, Emmanuel and Martiny, Delphine and Kenyon, Chris, Antimicrobial Susceptibility of Commensal Neisseria in the General Population and Men Who Have Sex with Men in Belgium: A Cross Sectional Survey. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3918299 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3918299

Jolein Laumen

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) ( email )

B-2000 Antwerp
Belgium

Christophe Van Dijck (Contact Author)

University of Antwerp - Department of Clinical Sciences ( email )

Belgium

Said Abdellati

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) ( email )

B-2000 Antwerp
Belgium

Irith De Baetselier

University of Antwerp - Department of Clinical Sciences ( email )

Gabriela Serrano

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) ( email )

B-2000 Antwerp
Belgium

Emmanuel Bottieau

University of Antwerp - Department of Clinical Sciences ( email )

Delphine Martiny

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) ( email )

B-2000 Antwerp
Belgium

Chris Kenyon

University of Antwerp - Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM)

B-2000 Antwerp
Belgium

No contact information is available for Sheeba Manoharan-Basil