- Christopher Ononiwu Elemuwa, PhD
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18309456
- GAS Journal of Clinical Medicine and Medical Research (GASJCMMR)
Background:
Despite major advances in molecular diagnostics, tuberculosis (TB) treatment
failure and relapse continue to occur among patients classified as
drug-susceptible. Current phenotypic and genotypic drug susceptibility testing
(DST) frameworks are designed to detect heritable genetic resistance but fail
to capture non-genetic bacterial survival strategies.
Objective:
This review critically examines diagnostic blind spots arising from phenotypic
drug tolerance and persistence in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and their
implications for TB treatment, surveillance, and control.
Main Body: Drug
tolerance and persistence are reversible phenotypic states that enable M.
tuberculosis to survive bactericidal drug exposure without changes in minimum
inhibitory concentrations (MICs). Tolerant population’s exhibit reduced killing
kinetics, while persisters represent dormant subpopulations capable of resuming
growth after treatment cessation. These survival states evade standard
phenotypic and genotypic diagnostics, contributing to genotype–phenotype
discordance, prolonged therapy, relapse, and amplification of resistance.
Underlying mechanisms include metabolic downregulation, activation of
stress-response pathways, toxin–antitoxin systems, and host-induced
environmental adaptation. The diagnostic and programmatic consequences of these
blind spots are particularly pronounced in high-burden, resource-limited
settings.
Conclusion: Beyond genetic resistance, phenotypic drug tolerance and persistence are critical determinants of TB treatment outcomes. Addressing these diagnostic blind spots requires a paradigm shift toward integrating phenotypic survival assessment into diagnostic, therapeutic, and surveillance frameworks to strengthen global TB control.

