4.5 Article

Yeasts from blood cultures in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic in a tertiary care hospital: Shift in species epidemiology, steady low antifungal resistance and full in vitro ibrexafungerp activity

Journal

MEDICAL MYCOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mmy/myad072

Keywords

fungemia; COVID-19; Candida; antifungal resistance; ibrexafungerp; EUCAST

Ask authors/readers for more resources

During the COVID-19 pandemic, there was an increase in both fungemia incidence and cases caused by Candida auris or fluconazole-resistant C. parapsilosis. A study conducted from January 2020 to December 2022 analyzed the impact of the pandemic on fungemia incidence, species epidemiology, potential patient-to-patient transmission, and antifungal resistance. The results showed a decrease in fungemia incidence over time and changes in species distribution, but no significant increase in antifungal resistance.
Several institutions reported a rise not only in fungemia incidence but also in the number of cases caused by Candida auris or fluconazole-resistant C. parapsilosis during the COVID-19 pandemic. Since the pandemic broke out in early 2020, we studied its impact on fungemia incidence, species epidemiology, potential patient-to-patient transmission, and antifungal resistance in 166 incident yeast isolates collected from January 2020 to December 2022. Isolates were molecularly identified, and their antifungal susceptibilities to amphotericin B, azoles, micafungin, anidulafungin, and ibrexafungerp were studied following the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) method, and genotyped. The fungemia incidence (episodes per 1000 admissions) tended to decrease over time (2020 = 1.60, 2021 = 1.36, 2022 = 1.16); P > .05). Species distribution was C. albicans (50.6%, n = 84), C. parapsilosis (18.7%, n = 31), C. glabrata (12.0%, n = 20), C. tropicalis (11.4%, n = 19), C. krusei (3.0%, n = 5), other Candida spp. (1.2%, n = 2), and non-Candida yeasts (3.0%, n = 5). The highest and lowest proportions of C. albicans and C. parapsilosis were detected in 2020. The proportion of isolates between 2020 and 2022 decreased in C. albicans (60.3% vs. 36.7%) and increased in C. parapsilosis (10.3% vs. 28.6%; P < .05) and C. tropicalis (8.8% vs. 16.3%; P > .05). Only three C. albicans intra-ward clusters involving two patients each were detected, and the percentages of patients involved in intra-ward clusters reached 9.8% and 8.0% in 2020 and 2021, respectively, suggesting that clonal spreading was not uncontrolled. Fluconazole resistance (5%) exhibited a decreasing trend (P > .05) over time (2020 = 7.6%; 2021 = 4.2%; and 2022 = 2.1%). Ibrexafungerp showed high in vitro activity. Lay Summary Fungemia incidence increased during the COVID-19 pandemic in our hospital, however, clonal spreading was not uncontrolled. The proportion of C. parapsilosis and C. tropicalis cases constantly increased. Antifungal resistance remained very low, and fluconazole-resistant C. parapsilosis was undetected.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available