1. Axillary Digital Thermometers uplifted a multidrug-susceptible Candida auris outbreak among COVID-19 patients in Brazil.
- Author
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Nobrega de Almeida J Jr, Brandão IB, Francisco EC, de Almeida SLR, de Oliveira Dias P, Pereira FM, Santos Ferreira F, de Andrade TS, de Miranda Costa MM, de Souza Jordão RT, Meis JF, and Colombo AL
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anidulafungin therapeutic use, Brazil epidemiology, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 microbiology, Critical Care, Disease Outbreaks, Female, Fluconazole therapeutic use, Humans, Male, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Middle Aged, Prevalence, SARS-CoV-2, Voriconazole therapeutic use, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Candida drug effects, Candidiasis diagnosis, Candidiasis drug therapy, Candidiasis epidemiology, Disease Transmission, Infectious, Thermometers microbiology
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe the first outbreak of Candida auris in Brazil, including epidemiological, clinical and microbiological data., Methods: After the first Candida auris-colonised patient was diagnosed in a COVID-19 ICU at a hospital in Salvador, Brazil, a multidisciplinary team conducted a local C. auris prevalence investigation. Screening cultures for C. auris were collected from patients, healthcare workers and inanimate surfaces. Risk factors for C. auris colonisation were evaluated, and the fungemia episodes that occurred after the investigation were also analysed and described. Antifungal susceptibility of the C. auris isolates was determined, and they were genotyped with microsatellite analysis., Results: Among body swabs collected from 47 patients, eight (n = 8/47, 17%) samples from the axillae were positive for C. auris. Among samples collected from inanimate surfaces, digital thermometers had the highest rate of positive cultures (n = 8/47, 17%). Antifungal susceptibility testing showed MICs of 0.5 to 1 mg/L for AMB, 0.03 to 0.06 mg/L for voriconazole, 2 to 4 mg/L for fluconazole and 0.03 to 0.06 mg/L for anidulafungin. Microsatellite analysis revealed that all C. auris isolates belong to the South Asian clade (Clade I) and had different genotypes. In multivariate analysis, having a colonised digital thermometer was the only independent risk factor associated with C. auris colonisation. Three episodes of C. auris fungemia occurred after the investigation, with 30-day attributable mortality of 33.3%., Conclusions: Emergence of C. auris in Salvador, Brazil, may be related to local C. auris clade I closely related genotypes. Contaminated axillary monitoring thermometers may facilitate the dissemination of C. auris reinforcing the concept that these reusable devices should be carefully cleaned with an effective disinfectant or replaced by other temperature monitoring methods., (© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2021
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