“…International guidelines have recommended macrolides or tetracyclines (TET) as the first-line drugs and fluoroquinolones as the second-line drugs in adults, whereas azithromycin (AZM) as the first-line drug, and clarithromycin, erythromycin (ERY), or doxycycline (for patients aged >8 years) along with fluoroquinolones [levofloxacin (LVX) or MOX for adolescent patients] as the second-line oral drugs, for mild pediatric cases (2). However, the emergence of macrolide-resistant MP (MRMP) has gradually increased worldwide in the last decade, especially in China and Japan the resistance rate has reached up to 90% (2)(3)(4)(5). Macrolides are preferred over other antimicrobials due to the lack of cell wall in MP; however, macrolides are susceptible to resistance due to point mutations in few positions of domain V of the peptidyl transferase loop of 23S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene (such as A2063G, A2064G, A2063C, A2063T, A2067G, and C2617G) and at the location of macrolide binding to the 50S bacterial ribosome subunit reduces the affinity of the antibiotic towards the ribosome (1,2,6).…”