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. 2003 Jan;47(1):82-6.
doi: 10.1128/AAC.47.1.82-86.2003.

Clinical Trichophyton rubrum strain exhibiting primary resistance to terbinafine

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Clinical Trichophyton rubrum strain exhibiting primary resistance to terbinafine

Pranab K Mukherjee et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2003 Jan.

Abstract

The in vitro antifungal susceptibilities of six clinical Trichophyton rubrum isolates obtained sequentially from a single onychomycosis patient who failed oral terbinafine therapy (250 mg/day for 24 weeks) were determined by broth microdilution and macrodilution methodologies. Strain relatedness was examined by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analyses. Data obtained from both broth micro- and macrodilution assays were in agreement and revealed that the six clinical isolates had greatly reduced susceptibilities to terbinafine. The MICs of terbinafine for these strains were >4 microg/ml, whereas they were <0.0002 microg/ml for the susceptible reference strains. Consistent with these findings, the minimum fungicidal concentrations (MFCs) of terbinafine for all six strains were >128 microg/ml, whereas they were 0.0002 microg/ml for the reference strain. The MIC of terbinafine for the baseline strain (cultured at the initial screening visit and before therapy was started) was already 4,000-fold higher than normal, suggesting that this is a case of primary resistance to terbinafine. The results obtained by the broth macrodilution procedure revealed that the terbinafine MICs and MFCs for sequential isolates apparently increased during the course of therapy. RAPD analyses did not reveal any differences between the isolates. The terbinafine-resistant isolates exhibited normal susceptibilities to clinically available antimycotics including itraconazole, fluconazole, and griseofulvin. However, these isolates were fully cross resistant to several other known squalene epoxidase inhibitors, including naftifine, butenafine, tolnaftate, and tolciclate, suggesting a target-specific mechanism of resistance. This is the first confirmed report of terbinafine resistance in dermatophytes.

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Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
RAPD analysis of terbinafine-resistant sequential T. rubrum isolates. Lane 1 (M), molecular size marker (0.1 to 21.2 kbp); lane 2, ATCC 18759 (reference strain); lane 3, NFI 5146 (baseline strain); lane 4, NFI 5147 (visit 2); lane 5, NFI 5150 (visit 7); lane 6, NFI 5151 (visit 8). The sizes of the markers (in base pairs) are indicated by the arrows on the left.

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