Four recent insights suggest the need for more refined methods to assess the resistogenicity of doxycycline post exposure prophylaxis

Research output: Contribution to journalA1: Web of Science-articlepeer-review

Abstract

Two recently published randomized trials of doxycycline post exposure prophylaxis (PEP) have concluded that this intervention is highly effective at reducing the incidence of bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and has little or no risk of promoting the spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). In this perspective piece, we review four types of evidence that suggest that the risk of promoting AMR has been inadequately assessed in these studies. 1) The studies have all used proportion resistant as the outcome measure. This is a less sensitive measure of resistogenicity than MIC distribution. 2) These RCTs have not considered population-level pathways of AMR selection. 3) In populations with very high antimicrobial consumption such as PrEP cohorts, the relationship between antimicrobial consumption and resistance may be saturated. 4) Genetic linkage of AMR means that increased tetracycline use may select for AMR to not only tetracyclines but also other antimicrobials in STIs and other bacterial species. We recommend novel study designs to more adequately assess the AMR-inducing risk of doxycycline PEP.
Original languageEnglish
Article number100234
JournalCurrent Research in Microbial Sciences
Volume6
Number of pages5
ISSN2666-5174
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • AMR
  • Doxycycline PEP
  • Gonorrhoea
  • MIC
  • PrEP
  • Proportion resistant
  • Tetracycline

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Four recent insights suggest the need for more refined methods to assess the resistogenicity of doxycycline post exposure prophylaxis'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this