Catherine Berry (she/her)
@catherineberry.bsky.social
4.3K followers 750 following 650 posts
ID MD, currently working on stewardship programming. Currently upskilling in NTM. Previously TB-Practecal and endTB with MSF.
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Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
absteward.bsky.social
What’s in a name?” Even microbes carry stories. @cmicomms.bsky.social
is launching a new series exploring the people behind eponymous organisms—those whose names live on through microbes like Escherichia or Pasteurella. Open call for submissions #idsky
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
The person behind the name – an open call for articles in a new series for CMI Communications
www.sciencedirect.com
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
infectiousdiva.bsky.social
Hi Bluesky! Taking my social media onto this platform as well. If you love all things ID, antimicrobial stewardship, infection prevention and teaching then give a follow 🥰 Oh and hopefully you get a few good laughs too 🤣
catherineberry.bsky.social
Great work. Also very keen to learn more about the IDDI (if available to non US folk).
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
jay-achar.bsky.social
Great to see this published after the hard work in Stockholm and Cape Town! How should we think about aerosol detection of #tuberculosis? Is it a diagnostic test? Could it help us prioritize prevention activities? Much more work to do, but exciting nonetheless @climeresearchgroup.bsky.social @ki.se
ofidjournal.bsky.social
Detection of aerosolized Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA from adults being investigated for pulmonary tuberculosis using an electrostatic sampler in a South African primary care setting

✅ Just Accepted
#IDSky
🔗 https://bit.ly/474fRq0
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
ghm-podcast.bsky.social
Our top 3 episodes of S4 on #GlobalHealthMatters podcast:
1️⃣ Malaria: Francine Ntoumi & Corine Karema 👉 https://tinyurl.com/GHM-E39
2️⃣ Power & responsibility: @seyeabimbola.bsky.social  & Hani Kim – 👉 http://tinyurl.com/GHM-E44 
3️⃣ Dialogues: Peter Hotez – 👉 https://tinyurl.com/peter-hotez
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
khadershabaana.bsky.social
Dear #microbiology and #immunology community- I took a break from social media after I deleted my Twitter account, but am back here. Please help me rebuild my community by following me and amplifying this message- I will follow you back. Thank you and I look forward to our many interactions!
catherineberry.bsky.social
Enter clofazimine. It had been showing some promise in cohort studies publications.ersnet.org/content/erj/... and then this trial showed some improvement in culture conversion and treatment outcomes. publications.ersnet.org/content/erj/...
Effectiveness and safety of standardised shorter regimens for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis: individual patient data and aggregate data meta-analyses
We assessed the effectiveness and safety of standardised, shorter multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) regimens by pooling data from observational studies.Published studies were identified from medical databases; unpublished studies were identified from expert consultation. We conducted aggregate data meta-analyses to estimate pooled proportions of treatment outcomes and individual patient data (IPD) meta-regression to identify risk factors for unsuccessful treatment in patients treated with 9- to 12-month MDR-TB regimens composed of a second-line injectable, gatifloxacin/moxifloxacin, prothionamide, clofazimine, isoniazid, pyrazinamide and ethambutol.We included five studies in which 796 out of 1279 (62.2%) individuals with confirmed MDR-TB (98.4%) or rifampin-resistant TB (1.6%), and not previously exposed to second-line drugs, were eligible for shorter regimens. 669 out of 796 participants were successfully treated (83.0%, 95% CI 71.9–90.3%). In IPD meta-regression (three studies, n=497), failure/relapse was associated with fluoroquinolone resistance (crude OR 46, 95% CI 8–273), pyrazinamide resistance (OR 8, 95% CI 2–38) and no culture conversion by month 2 of treatment (OR 7, 95% CI 3–202). Two participants acquired extensive drug resistance. Four studies reported grade 3 or 4 adverse events in 55 out of 304 (18.1%) participants.Shorter regimens were effective in treating MDR-TB; however, there is uncertainty surrounding the generalisability of the high rate of treatment success to less selected populations, to programmatic settings and in the absence of drug susceptibility tests to key component drugs.
publications.ersnet.org
catherineberry.bsky.social
Linezolid, bedaquiline and delamanid were on the radar but eye wateringly expensive, hard to get and given the mortality seen in the initial bdq trial, safety was a major concern.
catherineberry.bsky.social
So rifampicin-resistant #tuberculosis - let's start back in the mid 2010 when Soc was 18 months and included 6 months of an aminoglycoside given intramuscularly plus a FQ, cycloserine, PAS, prothionamide and pyrazinamide. Less than 50% achieved cure and it was awful.
catherineberry.bsky.social
Also on my dislike list - cycloserine. That we still use a drug that makes people actively psychotic is horrifying.
catherineberry.bsky.social
Yes. A bit. In a field of pretty terrible drugs it sits mid range.

I'll put together what I know for ntm and TB. Admitting upfront I know nothing about leprosy.
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
sc345.bsky.social
#idsky
asidaud.bsky.social
SAVE THE DATE!
3 & 4 July 2026
Hotel Intercontinental, Brisbane, QLD

ASID Zoonoses Conference is back for another year. Put this in your calendar as a must attend event.
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
escmid.bsky.social
📣 Get ready for ESCMID Global abstract submission! Abstract submission for #ESCMIDGlobal 2026 opens soon on 15 October 2025. You can already see important information for abstract presenters and guidelines for writing an impactful abstract. ow.ly/C4ji50X6fcS

#IDSky #clinmicro
catherineberry.bsky.social
Idk, in mycobacterial circles (where both the evidence and options are fairly grim) it's pretty high up in the "probably works to just makes you sick" ratio. In saying that much of that supporting work has been published since 2023.

My money would be on capreomycin. Or PAS.
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
msf.ca
Today marks 10 years since the bombing of the Kunduz trauma centre, #Afghanistan. We remember the 42 lives lost, including 14 MSF colleagues.

Since reopening in 2021, our teams have treated over 95,000 emergency patients. Hear how the new hospital is helping the community.
catherineberry.bsky.social
Don't get me started. #TBsky
imcrit.bsky.social
From lab to jab:

In 1882, Koch discovered the bacteria that cause tuberculosis (TB) but until now no vaccine effectively prevents TB in adults

In contrast, COVID-19 was identified in Jan 2020. By December 2 of that year a vaccine developed by BioNTech & Pfizer was approved in 🇺🇸
catherineberry.bsky.social
Great to see this. These types of substudies are key to ensure interventions are patient centred.
cidjournal.bsky.social
Patient-reported perceptions, experiences and preferences around intravenous and oral antibiotics for the treatment of Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia: a descriptive qualitative study.

✅ Just Accepted
#IDSky
🔗 https://bit.ly/3Iil2JB
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
richferro.com
Updated the Infectious Disease feed today. First, I did some bug fixes that prevented more accounts from appearing in the feed.

Additionally, from now on if you include #IDsky in your bio, your posts will automatically be filtered for Infectious Disease content along with anyone with ID labels.
Reposted by Catherine Berry (she/her)
kasic.bsky.social
Don’t Touch that Dapto! Check out this week’s KASIC pearl to Not Let the Bug Beat You: E. casseliflavus and E. gallinarum kymdro.org/kasic/?p=8575

#IDSky #AntimicrobialResistance #antimicrobialstewardship #rxsky #pharmacy #FOAMed #NPs #PAs
catherineberry.bsky.social
@onisillos.bsky.social - best way to reach out manuscript-wise? (aiming to save everyone's time).