4.7 Article

Candida auris Pan-Drug-Resistant to Four Classes of Antifungal Agents

Journal

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 66, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/aac.00053-22

Keywords

Candida auris; multidrug-resistant; pan-drug-resistant; transplant patient; New York; amphotericin B; flucytosine; echinocandins; fluconazole; antifungal combination; whole-genome sequencing; genemutation; gene deletion; real-time PCR; caspofungin

Funding

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-Antibiotic Resistance Lab Network grant [NU50CK000423]
  2. National Institutes of Health [1R21AI156573-01A1]

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Candida auris isolates from a patient who underwent transplantation were analyzed for genome and drug resistance. The isolates showed global similarity and a distinct subcluster. Drug resistance was observed in some isolates, including those with unique mutations. The pan-drug-resistant isolates were also resistant to two-drug combination therapy. Genetic analysis revealed in-hospital evolution and circulation of the C. auris isolates.
Candida auris is an urgent antimicrobial resistance threat due to its global emergence, high mortality, and persistent transmissions. Nearly half of C. auris clinical and surveillance cases in the United States are from the New York and New Jersey Metropolitan area. We performed genome, and drug-resistance analysis of C. auris isolates from a patient who underwent multi-visceral transplantation. Whole-genome comparisons of 19 isolates, collected over 72 days, revealed closed similarity (Average Nucleotide Identity. 0.9996; Aligned Percentage. 0.9764) and a distinct subcluster of NY C. auris South Asia Clade I. All isolates had azole-linked resistance in ERG11(K143R) and CDR1(V704L). Echinocandin resistance first appeared with FKS1(S639Y) mutation and then a unique FKS1(F635C) mutation. Flucytosine-resistant isolates had mutations in FCY1, FUR1, and ADE17. Two pan-drug-resistant C. auris isolates had uracil phosphoribosyltransferase deletion (FUR1[1 Delta 33]) and the elimination of FUR1 expression, confirmed by a qPCR test developed in this study. Besides ERG11 mutations, four amphotericin B-resistant isolates showed no distinct nonsynonymous variants suggesting unknown genetic elements driving the resistance. Pan-drug-resistant C. auris isolates were not susceptible to two-drug antifungal combinations tested by checker-board, Etest, and time-kill methods. The fungal population pattern, discerned from SNP phylogenetic analysis, was consistent with in-hospital or inpatient evolution of C. auris isolates circulating locally and not indicative of a recent introduction from elsewhere. The emergence of pan-drug-resistance to four major classes of antifungals in C. auris is alarming. Patients at high risk for drug-resistant C. auris might require novel therapeutic strategies and targeted pre-and/or posttransplant surveillance.

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