4.6 Article

Multilocus Sequence Typing and Antifungal Susceptibility of Vaginal and Non-vaginal Candida glabrata Isolates From China

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.808890

Keywords

Candida glabrata; multilocus sequence typing (MLST); vulvovaginal candidiasis; antifungal susceptibility; fluconazole; cross-resistance; genotype diversity

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This study investigated the antifungal susceptibility and molecular epidemiology of vaginal and non-vaginal Candida glabrata isolates. The results showed high resistance rates to fluconazole, itraconazole, and voriconazole, while all isolates remained susceptible to amphotericin B. Genotyping revealed partially shared genotypes between vaginal and non-vaginal samples, with additional genotypes found in vaginal samples. The majority of resistant strains correlated with the predominant genotype.
Candida glabrata is a common cause of Candida infections. In our present study, we investigated the antifungal susceptibility and molecular epidemiology of vaginal and non-vaginal C. glabrata isolates. Seventy-six vaginal C. glabrata strains isolated from patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis and 57 non-vaginal C. glabrata isolates were collected at two hospitals in Shanghai, China. Antifungal susceptibility was examined using a broth microdilution method. Multilocus sequence typing was used for genotyping. Overall, 28 (21.1%), 28 (21.1%), and 29 (21.8%) C. glabrata isolates were resistant to fluconazole, itraconazole, and voriconazole, respectively. Briefly, 18 (23.7%), 18 (23.7%), and 19 (25%) vaginal strains were resistant to fluconazole, itraconazole, and voriconazole. While the resistance to these antifungals were all 17.5% (10/57) in non-vaginal strains. All isolates retained susceptibility to amphotericin B, and only four non-vaginal isolates were caspofungin resistant. Genotyping identified 17 ST patterns. In non-vaginal samples, the same genotypes appear as in the vaginal samples, except for one genotype (ST-182), while in the vaginal samples more genotypes appear (ST8, ST19, ST45, ST55, ST66, ST80, ST138, and ST17). The most common genotype was ST7 (81 strains), followed by ST10 (14 strains) and ST15 (11 strains). The majority of resistant phenotype strains (25/30, 83.3%) correlated to the predominant genotype (ST7), and the rest belonged to ST3 (2/30, 6.7%), ST10 (1/30, 3.3%), ST19 (1/30, 3.3%), and ST45 (1/30, 3.3%). Our survey revealed cross-resistance in vaginal and non-vaginal C. glabrata isolates. Moreover, there is no genotype associated with the resistance phenotype.

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