4.6 Article

Emergence and Genomic Characterization of Multidrug Resistant Candida auris in Nigeria, West Africa

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof8080787

Keywords

Candida auris; multidrug resistance; azoles; sequencing; fungaemia

Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH-H3Africa [U01HG007480, U54HG007480]
  2. World Bank (ACE-IMPACT project)
  3. Rockefeller Foundation [2021 HTH]
  4. Africa CDC through the African Society of Laboratory Medicine (ASLM) [INV018978]
  5. Science for Africa Foundation

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Candida auris, a multidrug-resistant fungal pathogen, has caused severe sepsis in ICU patients in Southern Nigeria. Genetic analysis revealed antifungal resistance mutations and non-synonymous mutations in hotspot genes. These cases underscore the diagnostic gaps and the need for active disease surveillance in the region.
Candida auris is an emerging multidrug-resistant fungal pathogen that has become a worldwide public health threat due to the limitations of treatment options, difficulty in diagnosis, and its potential for clonal transmission. Four ICU patients from three different healthcare facilities in Southern Nigeria presented features suggestive of severe sepsis and the blood cultures yielded the growth of Candida spp., which was identified using VITEK 2 as C. auris. Further confirmation was performed using whole genome sequencing (WGS). From the genomic analysis, two had mutations that conferred resistance to the antifungal azole group and other non-synonymous mutations in hotspot genes, such as ERG2, ERG11, and FKS1. From the phylogenetic analysis, cases 2 and 4 had a confirmed mutation (ERG11:Y132F) that conferred drug resistance to azoles clustered with clade 1, whilst cases 1 and 3 clustered with clade 4. Three of the patients died, and the fourth was most likely a case of colonization since he received no antifungals and was discharged home. These first cases of C. auris reported from Nigeria were most likely introduced from different sources. It is of public health importance as it highlights diagnostic gaps in our setting and the need for active disease surveillance in the region.

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