Understanding recurrence in Mycobacterium avium complex pulmonary disease: genotypic strategies to support clinical decision-making
Minh Phuong Trinh, Sung Jae Shin, Min-Kyoung Shin

TL;DR
This paper reviews genotyping methods to distinguish between relapse and reinfection in Mycobacterium avium complex pulmonary disease, aiming to improve treatment and public health strategies.
Contribution
The paper comprehensively summarizes genotyping techniques and proposes integrating them into clinical practice for better management of MAC-PD recurrence.
Findings
54%–74% of MAC-PD recurrence is due to reinfection, likely from environmental sources.
High-resolution genotyping methods like whole-genome sequencing can accurately distinguish between relapse and reinfection.
Establishing a global MAC strain database and standardized SNP thresholds can improve clinical and public health responses.
Abstract
Pulmonary disease caused by Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC-PD) is a chronic, recurrent disease, and its high recurrence rate after treatment makes clinical management difficult. Distinguishing whether recurrence is due to persistence of existing strains or reinfection with new strains is essential for establishing treatment strategies, preventing overuse of antimicrobials, and establishing infection control measures. According to reports, 54%–74% of MAC-PD recurrence is due to reinfection, which may be mainly related to environmental reservoirs such as household water supply. In this review, we present various clinical scenarios in which MAC-PD recurrence may occur and examine genotyping techniques as a strategy to distinguish and respond to them. From traditional methods such as IS1245-based restriction fragment length polymorphism, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and hsp65 and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMycobacterium research and diagnosis · Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders
