In Vitro Susceptibility of Mycobacterium ulcerans to Clarithromycin

Abstract
Buruli ulcer (BU), caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans , was recently recognized by the World Health Organization as an important emerging disease. While antimycobacterial therapy is often effective for the earliest nodular or ulcerative lesions, medical management of BU lesions in patients presenting for treatment is usually disappointing, leaving wide surgical excision the only alternative. Advanced ulcerated lesions of BU rarely respond to antimycobacterial agents; however, perioperative administration of such drugs may prevent relapses or disseminated infections. Clarithromycin possesses strong activity in vitro and in vivo against most nontuberculous mycobacteria. In this study we determined the antimycobacterial activity of this drug in vitro against 46 strains of M. ulcerans isolated from 11 countries. The MIC of clarithromycin was determined at pH 6.6 (on 7H11 agar) and at pH 7.4 (on Mueller-Hinton agar). The MICs ranged from 0.125 to 2 μg/ml at pH 6.6 and from M. ulcerans and for the prevention of hematogenous dissemination of the etiologic agent during and after surgery. Studies should be initiated to evaluate the effects of clarithromycin in combination with ethambutol and rifampin on M. ulcerans both in vitro and in experimentally infected mice. Multidrug regimens containing clarithromycin may also help control the secondary bacterial infections sometimes seen in BU patients, most importantly osteomyelitis.