4.5 Article

Identification of the rare yeast Cutaneotrichosporon (Trichosporon) debeurmannianum from diabetic foot infection

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL LABORATORY ANALYSIS
Volume 36, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcla.24785

Keywords

Cutaneotrichosporon debeurmannianum; diabetic foot infection; MIC; Trichosporon debeurmannianum

Funding

  1. Korea Health Industry Development Institute
  2. Ministry of Health & Welfare and Ministry of Science and ICT, Republic of Korea [HI22C0595]

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Diabetic foot infection is a common complication of diabetes mellitus, and besides bacterial infections, fungal infections can also cause such infections. This study reports a case of diabetic foot infection caused by Cutaneotrichosporon debeurmannianum.
BackgroundDiabetic foot infection is the most common complications of diabetes mellitus. Although most of the diabetic foot infections has been known to be caused by aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, mycotic diabetic foot infection caused by Candida species has also been reported recently. Here, we present the first case of diabetic foot infection caused by Cutaneotrichosporon debeurmannianum (previously known as Trichosporon debeurmannianum). MethodsA 68-year-old diabetic male patient was admitted for management of the necrosis of the big toe. Wound swab culture was performed three times, and each time after 5 days of incubation, beige-colored, wrinkled, and rough colonies were observed on chocolate agar plate. ResultsThe isolate was identified as C. debeurmannianum with the matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry system (MicroIDSys, ASTA corp.). For confirmation, the sequencing for ITS1/ITS2 and D1/D2 ribosomal DNA was also performed, and the isolate was confirmed as C. debeurmannianum with 100% identity. The isolate exhibited low minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for azoles and high MICs for all echinocandins. ConclusionConsidering that usual incubation time for bacterial culture of open wound specimens is only 48 h, it is important to include the request for fungus culture to detect pathogen in diabetic foot lesion.

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