Treatment of Mycobacterium avium complex infection: Do the results of in vitro susceptibility tests predict therapeutic outcome in humans? JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES SISON, J. P., Yao, Y. Z., Kemper, C. A., Hamilton, J. R., Brummer, E., Stevens, D. A., Deresinski, S. C. 1996; 173 (3): 677-683

Abstract

The ability of various in vitro methods of antibiotic susceptibility testing to predict therapeutic outcome in patients infected with Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) was evaluated. Pretreatment bloodstream MAC isolates from 38 patients with AIDS, previously treated in a randomized fashion with either ethambutol, rifampin, or clofazimine, were tested by three conventional methods using broth or agar, as well as by cocultivation with macrophages. The results obtained with each method were compared with the quantitatively determined bacteriologic response to the administration of the single agent in humans. None of the conventional in vitro susceptibility methods was predictive of therapeutic outcome, while the results of cocultivation with macrophages were of moderate predictive value. The positive predictive value of a response in humans based on a response in macrophages (defined by > or = to 1.0 log reduction in baseline colony counts after 5 days of treatment) was 74%. The negative predictive value was 82%.

View details for Web of Science ID A1996TW80600021

View details for PubMedID 8627032