4.7 Article

Echinocandin Susceptibility Testing of Candida Species: Comparison of EUCAST EDef 7.1, CLSI M27-A3, Etest, Disk Diffusion, and Agar Dilution Methods with RPMI and IsoSensitest Media

Journal

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 54, Issue 1, Pages 426-439

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AAC.01256-09

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Astellas Pharma
  2. Merck Co. Inc
  3. Pfizer Aps
  4. NIH [AI069397]
  5. Gilead
  6. Merch Sharp Dohme
  7. Schering Plough
  8. Myconostica
  9. Gilead Sciences
  10. Soria Melguizo SA
  11. European Union
  12. Spanish Agency for International Cooperation
  13. Spanish Ministry of Culture and Education
  14. Spanish Health Research Fund
  15. Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  16. Ramon Areces Foundation
  17. Mutua Madrilena Foundation
  18. ALBAN program
  19. Mutua Madrilen a Foundation
  20. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES [R01AI069397] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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This study compared nine susceptibility testing methods and 12 endpoints for anidulafungin, caspofungin, and micafungin with the same collection of blinded FKS hot spot mutant (n = 29) and wild-type isolates (n = 94). The susceptibility tests included EUCAST Edef 7.1, agar dilution, Etest, and disk diffusion with RPMI-1640 plus 2% glucose (2G) and IsoSensitest-2G media and CLSI M27A-3. Microdilution plates were read after 24 and 48 h. The following test parameters were evaluated: fks hot spot mutants overlapping the wild-type distribution, distance between the two populations, number of very major errors (VMEs; fks mutants misclassified as susceptible), and major errors (MEs; wild-type isolates classified as resistant) using a wild-type-upper-limit value (WT-UL) (two twofold-dilutions higher than the MIC50) as the susceptibility breakpoint. The methods with the lowest number of errors (given as VMEs/MEs) across the three echinocandins were CLSI (12%/1%), agar dilution with RPMI-2G medium (14%/0%), and Etest with RPMI-2G medium (8%/3%). The fewest errors overall were observed for anidulafungin (4%/1% for EUCAST, 4%/3% for CLSI, and 3%/9% for Etest with RPMI-2G). For micafungin, VME rates of 10 to 71% were observed. For caspofungin, agar dilution with either medium was superior (VMEs/MEs of 0%/1%), while CLSI, EUCAST with IsoSensitest-2G medium, and Etest were less optimal (VMEs of 7%, 10%, and 10%, respectively). Applying the CLSI breakpoint (S <= 2 mu g/ml) for CLSI results, 89.2% fks hot spot mutants were classified as anidulafungin susceptible, 60.7% as caspofungin susceptible, and 92.9% as micafungin susceptible. In conclusion, no test was perfect, but anidulafungin susceptibility testing using the WT-UL to define susceptibility reliably identified fks hot spot mutants.

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