Association between pre-diagnostic fluoroquinolone exposure and possible acquired fluoroquinolone resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Shanghai: An EHR-based case-control study using whole-genome sequencing.
Yangyi Zhang, Danni Li, Jiazhen Liu, Yuan Jiang, Xin Shen, Biao Xu
The Journal of infection · 2025-11
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Fluoroquinolones (FQ) are one of the most prescribed broad-spectrum antibiotics and a cornerstone of tuberculosis (TB) treatment. TB patients may have had FQ resistance before treatment initiation. However, the association between pre-diagnostic FQ exposure and acquired FQ-resistant TB remains unclear.
METHODS: A case-control study was conducted among all pulmonary TB patients in Shanghai during 2022-2023. Cases were TB patients who had possible acquired FQ resistance identified through whole-genome sequencing (WGS), while controls were FQ susceptible patients. Pre-diagnostic FQ prescriptions were extracted from the Shanghai Electronic Health Record (EHR) platform.
RESULTS: Among 3496 patients, 7.4% had FQ-resistant TB, with 93.5% (243/260) phylogenetically inferred as possible acquired resistance. Multivariate analysis revealed FQ exposure was the strongest predictor of possible acquired FQ resistance with an aOR of 4.31 for a single prescription and 13.18 for multiple prescriptions. A nonlinear dose-response relationship between resistance probability and prescription number was found. Most prescriptions to cases were from non-TB-designated tertiary hospitals for non-TB respiratory diseases, with an exposure interval of ≥61 days prior to TB diagnosis.
CONCLUSION: Acquired resistance dominates FQ resistance in Shanghai TB patients. The dose-response relationship between pre-diagnostic FQ exposure and possible acquired resistance underscores the need for judicious FQ use.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Fluoroquinolones
- Case-Control Studies
- China
- Male
- Female
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Whole Genome Sequencing
- Middle Aged
- Adult
- Electronic Health Records
- Aged
- Drug Resistance, Bacterial
- Antitubercular Agents
- Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
- Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
- Anti-Bacterial Agents
- Young Adult