35 results on '"López-Soria L"'
Search Results
2. In Vitro Antifungal Activity of Ibrexafungerp (SCY-078) Against Contemporary Blood Isolates From Medically Relevant Species of Candida: A European Study
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Quindós G; Miranda-Cadena K; San-Millán R; Borroto-Esoda K; Cantón E; Linares-Sicilia MJ; Hamprecht A; Montesinos I; Tortorano AM; Prigitano A; Vidal-García M; Marcos-Arias C; Guridi A; Sanchez-Reus F; Machuca-Bárcena J; Rodríguez-Iglesias MA; Martín-Mazuelos E; Castro-Méndez C; López-Soria L; Ruiz-Gaitán A; Fernandez-Rivero M; Lorenzo D; Capilla J; Rezusta A; Pemán J; Guarro J; Pereira J; Pais C; Romeo O; Ezpeleta G; Jauregizar N; Angulo D; Eraso E, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Quindós G; Miranda-Cadena K; San-Millán R; Borroto-Esoda K; Cantón E; Linares-Sicilia MJ; Hamprecht A; Montesinos I; Tortorano AM; Prigitano A; Vidal-García M; Marcos-Arias C; Guridi A; Sanchez-Reus F; Machuca-Bárcena J; Rodríguez-Iglesias MA; Martín-Mazuelos E; Castro-Méndez C; López-Soria L; Ruiz-Gaitán A; Fernandez-Rivero M; Lorenzo D; Capilla J; Rezusta A; Pemán J; Guarro J; Pereira J; Pais C; Romeo O; Ezpeleta G; Jauregizar N; Angulo D; Eraso E
- Abstract
Background: Ibrexafungerp (SCY-078) is the newest oral and intravenous antifungal drug with broad activity, currently undergoing clinical trials for invasive candidiasis. Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the in vitro activity of ibrexafungerp and comparators against a collection of 434 European blood isolates of Candida. Methods: Ibrexafungerp, caspofungin, fluconazole, and micafungin minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) were collected from 12 European laboratories for 434 blood isolates, including 163 Candida albicans, 108 Candida parapsilosis, 60 Candida glabrata, 40 Candida tropicalis, 29 Candida krusei, 20 Candida orthopsilosis, 6 Candida guilliermondii, 2 Candida famata, 2 Candida lusitaniae, and 1 isolate each of Candida bracarensis, Candida catenulata, Candida dubliniensis, and Candida kefyr. MICs were determined by the EUCAST broth microdilution method, and isolates were classified according to recommended clinical breakpoints and epidemiological cutoffs. Additionally, 22 Candida auris from different clinical specimens were evaluated. Results: Ibrexafungerp MICs ranged from 0.016 to ≥8 mg/L. The lowest ibrexafungerp MICs were observed for C. albicans (geometric MIC 0.062 mg/L, MIC range 0.016–0.5 mg/L) and the highest ibrexafungerp MICs were observed for C. tropicalis (geometric MIC 0.517 mg/L, MIC range 0.06–≥8 mg/L). Modal MICs/MIC50s (mg/L) against Candida spp. were 0.125/0.06 for C. albicans, 0.5/0.5 for C. parapsilosis, 0.25/0.25 for C. glabrata, 0.5/0.5 for C. tropicalis, 1/1 for C. krusei, 4/2 for C. orthopsilosis, and 0.5/0.5 for C. auris. Ibrexafungerp showed activity against fluconazole- and echinocandin-resistant isolates. If adopting wild-type upper limits, a non-wild-type phenotype for ibrexafungerp was only observed for 16/434 (3.
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- 2022
3. Characterization and outcome of invasive infections due to Paecilomyces variotii: Analysis of patients from the FungiScope®registry and literature reports
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Sprute, R. Salmanton-Garciá, J. Sal, E. Malaj, X. Falces-Romero, I. Hatvani, L. Heinemann, M. Klimko, N. López-Soria, L. Meletiadis, J. Shruti, M. Steinmann, J. Seidel, D. Cornely, O.A. Stemler, J.
- Abstract
Objectives: To provide a basis for clinical management decisions in Paecilomyces variotii infection. Methods: Unpublished cases of invasive P. variotii infection from the FungiScope® registry and all cases reported in the literature were analysed. Results: We identified 59 cases with P. variotii infection. Main baseline factors were presence of indwelling devices in 29 cases (49.2%), particularly peritoneal catheters (33.9%) and prosthetic heart valves (10.2%), haematological or oncological diseases in 19 (32.2%), major surgery in 11 (18.6%), and diabetes mellitus in 10 cases (16.9%). The most prevalent infection sites were peritoneum (n = 20, 33.3%) and lungs (n = 16, 27.1%). Pain and fever were frequent (n = 35, 59.3% and n = 33, 55.9%, respectively). Diagnosis was established by culture in 58 cases (98.3%). P. variotii caused breakthrough infection in 8 patients. Systemic antifungals were given in 52 patients (88.1%). Amphotericin B was administered in 39, itraconazole in 15, and posaconazole in 8 patients. Clinical isolates were frequently resistant to voriconazole, whereas the above-mentioned antifungals showed good in vitro activity. Infections of the blood and CNS caused high mortality. Overall mortality was 28.8% and death was attributed to P. variotii in 10 cases. Conclusions: P. variotii causes life-threatening infections, especially in immunocompromised and critically ill patients with indwelling devices. Patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis are at particular risk. Multidisciplinary management is paramount, including molecular techniques for diagnosis and treatment with efficacious systemic antifungals. Amphotericin B, itraconazole and posaconazole are regarded as treatments of choice. Combination with flucytosine may be considered. Surgical debridement and removal of indwelling devices facilitate favourable outcome. © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.
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- 2021
4. Azole and Amphotericin B MIC Values against Aspergillus fumigatus: High Agreement between Spectrophotometric and Visual Readings Using the EUCAST EDef 9.3.2 Procedure
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Serrano-Lobo, J., Gómez, A., Sánchez-Yebra, W., Fajardo, M., Lorenzo, B., Sánchez-Reus, F., Vidal, I., Fernández-Torres, M., Sánchez-Romero, I., de Alegría-Puig, C.R., del Pozo, J.L., Muñoz, P., Escribano, P., Guinea, J., Sánchez-Gómez, J., Lozano, I., Marfil, E., de la Rosa, M.M., García, R.T., Cobo, F., Castro, C., López, C., Rezusta, A., Peláez, T., Castelló-Abietar, C., Cos-Tales, I., Serra, J.L., Jiménez, R., Echeverría, C.L., Pérez, C.L., Megías-Lobón, G., Ayats, J., Martín, M.T., Sánchez-Hellín, V., Ibáñez, E., Pemán, J., Pazos, C., Rodríguez-Mayo, M., Pérez-Ayala, A., Gómez, E., Serrano, J., Reigadas, E., Rodríguez, B., Zvezdanova, E., Díaz-García, J., González Leiva, J., Machado, M., García-Rodríguez, J., Vallejo, M.R., López-Soria, L., Marimón, J.M., Vicente, D., and Hernáez-Crespo, S.
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Azoles ,Posaconazole ,Antifungal Agents ,Itraconazole ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,azoles ,Microbiology ,Aspergillus fumigatus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,EUCAST ,Drug Resistance, Fungal ,Amphotericin B ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,spectrophotometric ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Voriconazole ,0303 health sciences ,Aspergillus ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,biology.organism_classification ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Infectious Diseases ,chemistry ,amphotericin B ,Mic values ,Azole ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The EUCAST EDef 9.3.2 procedure recommends visual readings of azole and amphotericin B MICs against Aspergillus spp. Visual determination of MICs may be challenging. In this work, we aim to obtain and compare visual and spectrophotometric MIC readings of azoles and amphotericin B against Aspergillus fumigatus sensu lato isolates. A total of 847 A. fumigatus sensu lato isolates (A. fumigatus sensu stricto [n = 828] and cryptic species [n = 19]) were tested against amphotericin B, itraconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole, and isavuconazole using the EUCAST EDef 9.3.2 procedure. Isolates were classified as susceptible or resistant/non-wild type according to the 2020 updated breakpoints. The area of technical uncertainty for the azoles was defined in the updated breakpoints. Visual and spectrophotometric (fungal growth reduction of >95% compared to the control, read at 540 nm) MICs were compared. Essential (±1 2-fold dilution) and categorical agreements were calculated. Overall, high essential (97.1%) and categorical (99.6%) agreements were found. We obtained 100% categorical agreements for amphotericin B, itraconazole, and posaconazole, and consequently, no errors were found. Categorical agreements were 98.7 and 99.3% for voriconazole and isavuconazole, respectively. Most of the misclassifications for voriconazole and isavuconazole were found to be associated with MIC results falling either in the area of technical uncertainty or within one 2-fold dilution above the breakpoint. The resistance rate was slightly lower when the MICs were obtained by spectrophotometric readings. However, all relevant cyp51A mutants were correctly classified as resistant. Spectrophotometric determination of azole and amphotericin B MICs against A. fumigatus sensu lato isolates may be a convenient alternative to visual endpoint readings.
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- 2020
5. Role of age and comorbidities in mortality of patients with infective endocarditis
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Armiñanzas, C., Fariñas-Alvarez, C., Zarauza, J., Muñoz, P., González Ramallo, V., Martínez Sellés, M., Miró Meda, J.M., Pericás, J.M., Goenaga, M.Á., Ojeda Burgos, G., Rodríguez Álvarez, R., Castelo Corral, L., Gálvez-Acebal, J., Martínez Marcos, F.J., Fariñas, M.C., Fernández Sánchez, F., Noureddine, M., Rosas, G., de la Torre Lima, J., Aramendi, J., Bereciartua, E., Blanco, M.J., Blanco, R., Boado, M.V., Campaña Lázaro, M., Crespo, A., Goikoetxea, J., Iruretagoyena, J.R., Irurzun Zuazabal, J., López-Soria, L., Montejo, M., Nieto, J., Rodrigo, D., Rodríguez, D., Rodríguez, R., Vitoria, Y., Voces, R., García López, M.V., Georgieva, R.I., Ojeda, G., Rodríguez Bailón, I., Ruiz Morales, J., Cuende, A.M., Echeverría, T., Fuerte, A., Gaminde, E., Idígoras, P., Iribarren, J.A., Izaguirre Yarza, A., Kortajarena Urkola, X., Reviejo, C., Carrasco, R., Climent, V., Llamas, P., Merino, E., Plazas, J., Reus, S., Álvarez, N., Bravo-Ferrer, J.M., Castelo, L., Cuenca, J., Llinares, P., Miguez Rey, E., Rodríguez Mayo, M., Sánchez, E., Sousa Regueiro, D., Martínez, F.J., Alonso, M.D.M., Castro, B., García Rosado, D., Durán, M.D.C., Miguel Gómez, M.A., Lacalzada, J., Nassar, I., Plata Ciezar, A., Reguera Iglesias, J.M., Asensi Álvarez, V., Costas, C., de la Hera, J., Fernández Suárez, J., Iglesias Fraile, L., León Arguero, V., López Menéndez, J., Mencia Bajo, P., Morales, C., Moreno Torrico, A., Palomo, C., Paya Martínez, B., Rodríguez Esteban, Á., Rodríguez García, R., Telenti Asensio, M., Almela, M., Ambrosioni, J., Azqueta, M., Brunet, M., Bodro, M., Cartañá, R., Falces, C., Fita, G., Fuster, D., García de la Mària, C., Hernández-Meneses, M., Llopis Pérez, J., Marco, F., Miró, J.M., Moreno, A., Nicolás, D., Ninot, S., Quintana, E., Paré, C., Pereda, D., Pomar, J.L., Ramírez, J., Rovira, I., Sandoval, E., Sitges, M., Soy, D., Téllez, A., Tolosana, J.M., Vidal, B., Vila, J., Adán, I., Bermejo, J., Bouza, E., Celemín, D., Cuerpo Caballero, G., Delgado Montero, A., Fernández Cruz, A., García Mansilla, A., García Leoni, M.E., Kestler Hernández, M., Hualde, A.M., Marín, M., Martínez-Sellés, M., Menárguez, M.C., Rincón, C., Rodríguez-Abella, H., Rodríguez-Créixems, M., Pinilla, B., Pinto, Á., Valerio, M., Vázquez, P., Verde Moreno, E., Antorrena, I., Loeches, B., Martín Quirós, A., Moreno, M., Ramírez, U., Rial Bastón, V., Romero, M., Saldaña, A., Agüero Balbín, J., Amado, C., Armiñanzas Castillo, C., Arnaiz García, A., Cobo Belaustegui, M., Fariñas-Álvarez, C., Gómez Izquierdo, R., García, I., González-Rico, C., Gutiérrez-Cuadra, M., Gutiérrez Díez, J., Pajarón, M., Parra, J.A., Sarralde, A., Teira, R., Domínguez, F., García Pavía, P., González, J., Orden, B., Ramos, A., Centella, T., Hermida, J.M., Moya, J.L., Martín-Dávila, P., Navas, E., Oliva, E., del Río, A., Ruiz, S., Hidalgo Tenorio, C., Almendro Delia, M., Araji, O., Barquero, J.M., Calvo Jambrina, R., de Cueto, M., Gálvez Acebal, J., Méndez, I., Morales, I., and Matamala Adell, M.
- Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to analyse the characteristics of patients with IE in three groups of age and to assess the ability of age and the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) to predict mortality. Methods: Prospective cohort study of all patients with IE included in the GAMES Spanish database between 2008 and 2015. Patients were stratified into three age groups
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- 2020
6. First isolation in the Iberian Peninsula of Candida nivariensis from a malnourished patient suffering from a catheterassociated candidaemia: P451
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López-Soria, L. M., Bereciartua, E., Eraso, E., Hernández-Almaraz, J. L., Montejo, M., and Quindós, G.
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- 2012
7. Method-dependent epidemiological cutoff values for detection of triazole resistance in Candida and Aspergillus species for the Sensititre Yeastone colorimetric broth and etest agar diffusion methods
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Espinel-Ingroff, A. Turnidge, J. Alastruey-Izquierdo, A. Botterel, F. Canton, E. Castro, C. Chen, Y.-C. Chen, Y. Chryssanthou, E. Dannaoui, E. Garcia-Effron, G. Gonzalez, G.M. Govender, N.P. Guinea, J. Kidd, S. Lackner, M. Lass-Flörl, C. Linares-Sicilia, M.J. López-Soria, L. Magobo, R. Pelaez, T. Quindós, G. Rodriguez-Iglesia, M.A. Ruiz, M.A. Sánchez-Reus, F. Sanguinetti, M. Shields, R. Szweda, P. Tortorano, A. Wengenack, N.L. Bramati, S. Cavanna, C. DeLuca, C. Gelmi, M. Grancini, A. Lombardi, G. Meletiadis, J. Negri, C.E. Passera, M. Peman, J. Prigitano, A. Sala, E. Tejada, M.
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bacterial infections and mycoses - Abstract
Although the Sensititre Yeast-One (SYO) and Etest methods are widely utilized, interpretive criteria are not available for triazole susceptibility testing of Candida or Aspergillus species. We collected fluconazole, itraconazole, posaconazole, and voriconazole SYO and Etest MICs from 39 laboratories representing all continents for (method/agent-dependent) 11,171 Candida albicans, 215 C. dubliniensis, 4,418 C. glabrata species complex, 157 C. guilliermondii (Meyerozyma guilliermondii), 676 C. krusei (Pichia kudriavzevii), 298 C. lusitaniae (Clavispora lusitaniae), 911 C. parapsilosis sensu stricto, 3,691 C. parapsilosis species complex, 36 C. metapsilosis, 110 C. orthopsilosis, 1,854 C. tropicalis, 244 Saccharomyces cerevisiae, 1,409 Aspergillus fumigatus, 389 A. flavus, 130 A. nidulans, 233 A. Niger, and 302 A. terreus complex isolates. SYO/Etest MICs for 282 confirmed non-wild-type (non-WT) isolates were included: ERG11 (C. albicans), ERG11 and MRR1 (C. parapsilosis), cyp51A (A. fumigatus), and CDR2 and CDR1 overexpression (C. albicans and C. glabrata, respectively). Interlaboratory modal agreement was superior by SYO for yeast species and by the Etest for Aspergillus spp. Distributions fulfilling CLSI criteria for epidemiological cutoff value (ECV) definition were pooled, and we proposed SYO ECVs for S. cerevisiae and 9 yeast and 3 Aspergillus species and Etest ECVs for 5 yeast and 4 Aspergillus species. The posaconazole SYO ECV of 0.06 g/ml for C. albicans and the Etest itraconazole ECV of 2 g/ml for A. fumigatus were the best predictors of non-WT isolates. These findings support the need for method-dependent ECVs, as, overall, the SYO appears to perform better for susceptibility testing of yeast species and the Etest appears to perform better for susceptibility testing of Aspergillus spp. Further evaluations should be conducted with more Candida mutants. Copyright © 2018 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
- Published
- 2019
8. Method-dependent epidemiological cutoff values for detection of triazole resistance in Candida and Aspergillus species for the Sensititre Yeastone colorimetric broth and etest agar diffusion methods
- Author
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Espinel-Ingroff, A., Turnidge, J., Alastruey-Izquierdo, A., Botterel, F., Canton, E., Castro, C., Chen, Y. -C., Chen, Y., Chryssanthou, E., Dannaoui, E., Garcia-Effron, G., Gonzalez, G. M., Govender, N. P., Guinea, J., Kidd, S., Lackner, M., Lass-Flörl, C., Linares-Sicilia, M. J., López-Soria, L., Magobo, R., Pelaez, T., Quindós, G., Rodriguez-Iglesia, M. A., Ruiz, M. A., Sánchez-Reus, F., Sanguinetti, Maurizio, Shields, R., Szweda, P., Tortorano, A., Wengenack, N. L., Bramati, S., Cavanna, C., Deluca, C., Gelmi, M., Grancini, A., Lombardi, Gianmarco, Meletiadis, J., Negri, C. E., Passera, M., Peman, J., Prigitano, A., Sala, E., Tejada, M., Sanguinetti, M. (ORCID:0000-0002-9780-7059), Espinel-Ingroff, A., Turnidge, J., Alastruey-Izquierdo, A., Botterel, F., Canton, E., Castro, C., Chen, Y. -C., Chen, Y., Chryssanthou, E., Dannaoui, E., Garcia-Effron, G., Gonzalez, G. M., Govender, N. P., Guinea, J., Kidd, S., Lackner, M., Lass-Flörl, C., Linares-Sicilia, M. J., López-Soria, L., Magobo, R., Pelaez, T., Quindós, G., Rodriguez-Iglesia, M. A., Ruiz, M. A., Sánchez-Reus, F., Sanguinetti, Maurizio, Shields, R., Szweda, P., Tortorano, A., Wengenack, N. L., Bramati, S., Cavanna, C., Deluca, C., Gelmi, M., Grancini, A., Lombardi, Gianmarco, Meletiadis, J., Negri, C. E., Passera, M., Peman, J., Prigitano, A., Sala, E., Tejada, M., and Sanguinetti, M. (ORCID:0000-0002-9780-7059)
- Abstract
Although the Sensititre Yeast-One (SYO) and Etest methods are widely utilized, interpretive criteria are not available for triazole susceptibility testing of Candida or Aspergillus species. We collected fluconazole, itraconazole, posaconazole, and voriconazole SYO and Etest MICs from 39 laboratories representing all continents for (method/agent-dependent) 11,171 Candida albicans, 215 C. dubliniensis, 4,418 C. glabrata species complex, 157 C. guilliermondii (Meyerozyma guilliermondii), 676 C. krusei (Pichia kudriavzevii), 298 C. lusitaniae (Clavispora lusitaniae), 911 C. parapsilosis sensu stricto, 3,691 C. parapsilosis species complex, 36 C. metapsilosis, 110 C. orthopsilosis, 1,854 C. tropicalis, 244 Saccharomyces cerevisiae, 1,409 Aspergillus fumigatus, 389 A. flavus, 130 A. nidulans, 233 A. Niger, and 302 A. terreus complex isolates. SYO/Etest MICs for 282 confirmed non-wild-type (non-WT) isolates were included: ERG11 (C. albicans), ERG11 and MRR1 (C. parapsilosis), cyp51A (A. fumigatus), and CDR2 and CDR1 overexpression (C. albicans and C. glabrata, respectively). Interlaboratory modal agreement was superior by SYO for yeast species and by the Etest for Aspergillus spp. Distributions fulfilling CLSI criteria for epidemiological cutoff value (ECV) definition were pooled, and we proposed SYO ECVs for S. cerevisiae and 9 yeast and 3 Aspergillus species and Etest ECVs for 5 yeast and 4 Aspergillus species. The posaconazole SYO ECV of 0.06 g/ml for C. albicans and the Etest itraconazole ECV of 2 g/ml for A. fumigatus were the best predictors of non-WT isolates. These findings support the need for method-dependent ECVs, as, overall, the SYO appears to perform better for susceptibility testing of yeast species and the Etest appears to perform better for susceptibility testing of Aspergillus spp. Further evaluations should be conducted with more Candida mutants.
- Published
- 2019
9. Rareness of certain Mediterranean ant species: fact or artifact?
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Espadaler, X. and López-Soria, L.
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- 1991
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10. Resprouting vigour of two mediterranean shrub species after experimental fire treatments
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Canadell, J., Lloret, F., and López-Soria, L.
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- 1991
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11. Method-Dependent Epidemiological Cutoff Values for Detection of Triazole Resistance in Candida and Aspergillus Species for the Sensititre YeastOne Colorimetric Broth and Etest Agar Diffusion Methods
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Espinel-Ingroff, A., primary, Turnidge, J., additional, Alastruey-Izquierdo, A., additional, Botterel, F., additional, Canton, E., additional, Castro, C., additional, Chen, Y.-C., additional, Chen, Y., additional, Chryssanthou, E., additional, Dannaoui, E., additional, Garcia-Effron, G., additional, Gonzalez, G. M., additional, Govender, N. P., additional, Guinea, J., additional, Kidd, S., additional, Lackner, M., additional, Lass-Flörl, C., additional, Linares-Sicilia, M. J., additional, López-Soria, L., additional, Magobo, R., additional, Pelaez, T., additional, Quindós, G., additional, Rodriguez-Iglesia, M. A., additional, Ruiz, M. A., additional, Sánchez-Reus, F., additional, Sanguinetti, M., additional, Shields, R., additional, Szweda, P., additional, Tortorano, A., additional, Wengenack, N. L., additional, Bramati, S., additional, Cavanna, C., additional, DeLuca, C., additional, Gelmi, M., additional, Grancini, A., additional, Lombardi, G., additional, Meletiadis, J., additional, Negri, C. E., additional, Passera, M., additional, Peman, J., additional, Prigitano, A., additional, Sala, E., additional, and Tejada, M., additional
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- 2019
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12. Endocarditis infecciosa (EI) por Candida en un hospital terciario
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Rodríguez-Álvarez, Regino, primary, Goikoetxea, J., additional, Voces, R., additional, López-Soria, L., additional, and Montejo, M., additional
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- 2018
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13. Transmission dynamics of HIV-1 subtype B in the Basque Country, Spain
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Patiño-Galindo JA, Thomson MM, Pérez-Álvarez L, Delgado E, Cuevas MT, Fernández-García A, Nájera R, Iribarren JA, Cilla G, López-Soria L, Lezaun MJ, Cisterna R, González-Candelas F, and Group of HIV-1 Antiretroviral Resistance Studies in the Basque Country
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Antiretroviral resistance ,IDUs ,virus diseases ,MSM ,Transmission cluster - Abstract
This work was aimed to study the HIV-1 subtype B epidemics in the Basque Country, Spain. 1727HIV-1 subtype B sequences comprising protease and reverse transcriptase (PR/RT) coding regions, sampled between 2001 and 2008, were analyzed. 156 transmission clusters were detected by means of phylogenetic analyses. Most of them comprised less than 4 individuals and, in total, they included 441 patients. Six clusters comprised 10 or more patients and were further analyzed in order to study their origin and diversification. Four clusters included men who had unprotected homosexual sex (MSM), one group was formed by intravenous drug users (IDUs), and another included both IDUs and people infected through unprotected heterosexual sex (HTs). Most of these clusters originated from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s. Only one cluster, formed by MSM, originated after 2000. The time between infections was significantly lower in MSM groups than in those containing IDUs (P-value
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- 2016
14. Molecular Identification of Saprochaete capitata in Human Blood and Paraffinized Tissue Samples
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Arrieta-Aguirre, I., primary, Menéndez-Manjón, P., additional, Cuétara, M. S., additional, López-Soria, L., additional, García-Ruiz, J. C., additional, and Moragues, M. D., additional
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- 2017
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15. Corioamnionitis de etiología inusual
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Martínez-Rienda, I., García-Manuz, R., Azpiazu-Monterrubio, P., and López-Soria, L.
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- 2024
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16. Molecular Identification of Saprochaete capitatain Human Blood and Paraffinized Tissue Samples
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Arrieta-Aguirre, I., Menéndez-Manjón, P., Cuétara, M. S., López-Soria, L., García-Ruiz, J. C., and Moragues, M. D.
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- 2017
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17. Recruitment of a mast-fruiting, bird-dispersed tree: Bridging frugivore activity and seedling establishment
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Herrera, Carlos M., Jordano, Pedro, López-Soria, L., and Amat, Juan A.
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education.field_of_study ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,Seed dispersal ,Population ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Shrubland ,Seed dispersal syndrome ,Frugivore ,Seedling ,Germination ,Seed predation ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The recruitment of Phillyrea latifolia L. (Oleaceae), a bird-dispersed tree of Mediterranean forest, is described. Fruit removal by birds, seed rain, post-dispersal seed predation, seed germination, and seedling emergence, survival, and establishment were studied. The main objective was testing whether seed dispersal by birds produced a predictable seedling shadow as a result of coupled patterns of seed rain, seedling emergence, and seedling establishment. P. latifolia is a mast-fruiting species and large fruit crops were produced in only 2 (1981 and 1989) out of 15 yr (1978-1992). We report here on the 1989 fruiting event at one scrubland and one forest site. Ripe fruits were available from mid-September to early June. Extensive removal by birds started after fruit crops of other species were depleted. Seed dispersers were more abundant, and fruit predators more scarce, in scrubland than in forest. P. latifolia fruits were a major component in the diet of principal seed dispersers (Sylvia atricapilla and Erithacus rubecula) that depended almost exclusively on them for food late in the season. Fruit removal levels were higher, crops were depleted earlier, and individual plants dispersed more seeds in scrubland than in forest. Crop size was the best predictor of number of seeds dispersed by individual plants in scrubland, while fruit characteristics were more influential in forest. Seed dispersal was largely a within-population phenomenon, as no seed fall occurred in traps set beyond the distributional limits of P. latifolia in the study region. Frugivores produced a spatially predictable seed rain at the two sites. Seed rain was greatest beneath fleshy fruit-producing species (under female individuals in dioecious species) in scrubland and at forest-gap interfaces in forest. Post-dispersal seed predation was low at the two sites (39 and 54% after 1-yr exposure). In forest, seed survival was lower in gaps than in forest interior or forest edges. In scrubland, seed survival differed widely among microhabitats (defined by overlying plant species), ranging from 19% (open ground) to 61% (beneath Rosmarinus officinalis). In forest, density of emerging seedlings was unrelated to location in the habitat mosaic (gap, forest edge, interior). Seedling density did differ among microhabitats in scrubland, where emergence was greatest under fleshy fruit-producing species. Seedling survival was higher in forest than in scrubland, where seedlings incurred greater mortality due to desiccation. In both sizes, seedling survival depended significantly on microhabitat and was depressed under adult conspecifics. The activity of frugivores directly impacted seedling distribution in scrubland, as spatial patterns of seed deposition were not overshadowed by later-acting factors, such as rodent seed predation or variation in germination. In forest, there was spatial discordance between seed rain and seedling distribution, as a consequence of uncoupled seed rain and seedling emergence. Spatial patterns of seed deposition by birds may thus have a lasting impact on the population dynamics of P. latifolia, but this will vary among populations depending on the extent of coupling of the different stages in the recruitment process (dispersal-seed rain-germination and seedling establishment).
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- 1994
18. Case Reports. Infection due to Scedosporium apiospermum in renal transplant recipients: a report of two cases and literature review of central nervous system and cutaneous infections by Pseudallescheria boydii/Sc. apiospermum
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Montejo, M., primary, Muñiz, M. L., additional, Zárraga, S., additional, Aguirrebengoa, K., additional, Amenabar, J. J., additional, López‐Soria, L, additional, and Gonzalez, R., additional
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- 2002
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19. Pseudomonas aeruginosa: A multicenter study in 136 hospitals in Spain,Pseudomonas aeruginosa: Estudio multicéntrico en 136 hospitales Españoles
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Bouza, E., García-Garrote, F., Cercenado, E., Marín, M., Díaz, M. S., Sánchez Romero, I., Vindel, A., Àlvarez, R. M., Fernández Pérez, F., Del Valle-Ortiz Maeztu, O., Almirante, B., Idastorza, I., Díaz García, R., Leyva León, J., Agulla Budiño, A., Rodriguez Mayo, M., Tinajas Puertas, A., Paz Vidal, I., Cachón Gracia, F., García Rodríguez, J. A., García Sánchez, J. E., Lantero Benedito, M., Undabeitia Santiesteban, E., Olarte Olarte, I., Alonso García, M. P., Rodríguez, A., Otero, I., Alvarez Fernández, M., Fontanals, D., Mariscal, D., Soriano García, F., Gadea, I., Noriega, A., Folqueira, L., Lloret Caballeira, A., Segarra, C., Cisterna Cáncer, R., Ezpeleta, C., García Lomas Barrionuevo, J., Gimeno Cardona, C., Rubio, M. C., Pinedo Sánchez, A., Jiménez Anta Losada, M. T., Almela Prades, M., Navarro Pardos, C., Carmen Aspiroz, Colomo, L. F., Mellado, P., Martínez, J., Gimeno Crespo, C., Méndez García, J., Cimadevílla, R., Urmeneta Rada, A., Martín-Scapa, C., Gasterurrutia, L., López Soria, L., Echeverría Irigoyen, J., Batlle I Surruca, J., Motjé Casas, M., Hidalgo Pérez, M. E., Gutíérrez, A., García Perea, A., Nogues, A., García, M., Torres Piñón, J., Vasallo Vidal, F. J., Pérez Revílla, A., Gómez Garcés, J. L., Dorronsoro Ibero, I., García Irure, J. J., García Aguayo, J. M., Ortiz La Tabla Ducasse, V., Martín González, C., López Gracia, J., Martín Saco, G., Santamaria Puíg, J. M., Tapiol Oliva, M. J., Navarro Gallar, F., Sánchez Santana, P., Fuster Foz, C., Salvadó, M., Torrella, M. T., Menéndez Rivas, M., Alberte Castinieiras, A., Pérez Pascual, P., Calbo Torrecillas, L., Francisco Ramírez, J. L., Sánchez Porto, A., Domínguez Jiménez, M. C., Reyes Bertos, A., Gonzalo Jiménez, M. N., Giner Almaraz, S., Nogueira, J. M., Igual Adell, R., Plata Rosales, C., Crespo Sánchez, D., Andreu, M., Plazas Ruiz, J., and Santos Rionda, M. J.
20. Endocarditis infecciosa (EI) por Candidaen un hospital terciario
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Rodríguez-Álvarez, Regino, Goikoetxea, J., Voces, R., López-Soria, L., and Montejo, M.
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- 2018
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21. Method-Dependent Epidemiological Cutoff Values for Detection of Triazole Resistance in Candidaand AspergillusSpecies for the Sensititre YeastOne Colorimetric Broth and Etest Agar Diffusion Methods
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Espinel-Ingroff, A., Turnidge, J., Alastruey-Izquierdo, A., Botterel, F., Canton, E., Castro, C., Chen, Y.-C., Chen, Y., Chryssanthou, E., Dannaoui, E., Garcia-Effron, G., Gonzalez, G. M., Govender, N. P., Guinea, J., Kidd, S., Lackner, M., Lass-Flörl, C., Linares-Sicilia, M. J., López-Soria, L., Magobo, R., Pelaez, T., Quindós, G., Rodriguez-Iglesia, M. A., Ruiz, M. A., Sánchez-Reus, F., Sanguinetti, M., Shields, R., Szweda, P., Tortorano, A., Wengenack, N. L., Bramati, S., Cavanna, C., DeLuca, C., Gelmi, M., Grancini, A., Lombardi, G., Meletiadis, J., Negri, C. E., Passera, M., Peman, J., Prigitano, A., Sala, E., and Tejada, M.
- Abstract
Although the Sensititre Yeast-One (SYO) and Etest methods are widely utilized, interpretive criteria are not available for triazole susceptibility testing of Candidaor Aspergillusspecies. We collected fluconazole, itraconazole, posaconazole, and voriconazole SYO and Etest MICs from 39 laboratories representing all continents for (method/agent-dependent) 11,171 Candida albicans, 215 C. dubliniensis, 4,418 C. glabrataspecies complex, 157 C.guilliermondii(Meyerozyma guilliermondii), 676 C. krusei(Pichia kudriavzevii), 298 C.lusitaniae(Clavispora lusitaniae), 911 C.parapsilosissensu stricto, 3,691 C.parapsilosisspecies complex, 36 C.metapsilosis, 110 C.orthopsilosis, 1,854 C.tropicalis, 244 Saccharomyces cerevisiae, 1,409 Aspergillus fumigatus, 389 A.flavus, 130 A.nidulans, 233 A.niger, and 302 A.terreuscomplex isolates.
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- 2018
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22. Impact of antibiotic resistance on outcomes of neutropenic cancer patients with Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteraemia (IRONIC study): study protocol of a retrospective multicentre international study
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Albasanz-Puig, Adaia, Gudiol, Carlota, Parody, Rocio, Tebe, Cristian, Akova, Murat, Araos, Rafael, Bote, Anna, Brunel, Anne-Sophie, Calik, Sebnem, Drgona, Lubos, Garcia, Estefania, Hemmati, Philipp, Herrera, Fabian, Ibrahim, Karim Yaqub, Isler, Burcu, Kanj, Souha, Kern, Winfried, Maestro de la Calle, Guillermo, Manzur, Adriana, Ivan Marin, Jorge, Marquez-Gomez, Ignacio, Martin-Davila, Pilar, Mikulska, Malgorzata, Montejo, Jose Miguel, Montero, Milagros, Paz Morales, Hugo Manuel, Morales, Isabel, Novo, Andres, Oltolini, Chiara, Peghin, Maddalena, Luis del Pozo, Jose, Puerta-Alcalde, Pedro, Ruiz-Camps, Isabel, Resat Sipahi, Oguz, Tilley, Robert, Yanez, Lucrecia, Ribeiro Gomes, Marisa Zenaide, Carratala, Jordi, Cuervo, Guillermo, Escrihuela-Vidal, Francesc, Tubau, Fe, Rodriguez Arias, Marisol, Merve Ayaz, Caglayan, Munita, Jose, Gasch, Oriol, Capilla, Silvia, Bochud, Pierre-Yves, Manuel, Oriol, Torre-Cisneros, Julian, Tabares, Salvador, Serrano Lopez, Josefina, Maschmeyer, Georg, Torres, Diego, Abdala, Edson, Bittencourt, Driele Peixoto, El Zein, Saeed, Jabbour, Jean-Francois, Bertz, Hartmut, Peyerl-Hoffmann, Gabriele, Lizasoain, Manuel, Maria Aguado, Jose, Clemencia Correa, Lina, Palop, Begona, Fortun, Jesus, Magnasco, Laura, Cespedes, Roberto, Lopez-Soria, Leire, Pablo Horcajada, Juan, Montaguti, Mia Hold, de Cueto, Marina, Rodriguez-Bano, Jesus, Greco, Raffaella, Cichero, Paola, Bassetti, Matteo, Castaldo, Nadia, Sangro del Alcazar, Paloma, Cardozo, Celia, Garcia-Vidal, Carolina, Aguilar-Company, Juan, Larrosa, Nieves, Uyan-Onal, Ayse, Nazli-Zeka, Arzu, Vasconcelos de Freitas, Wania, da Silva Machado, Amanda Aparecida, IRONIC Study Grp, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (España), European Commission, IRONIC study group, Cuervo, G., Escrihuela-Vidal, F., Arias, M.R., Ayaz, C.M., Munita, J., Gasch, O., Bochud, P.Y., Manuel, O., Torres, D., Zein, S.E., Jabbour, J.F., Bertz, H., Peyerl-Hoffmann, G., Lizasoain, M., Aguado, J.M., Palop, B., Fortún, J., Maschmeyer, G., Magnasco, L., Céspedes, R., López-Soria, L., Horcajada, J.P., Montaguti, M.H., Cueto, M., Rodríguez-Baño, J., Greco, R., Cichero, P., Bassetti, M., Castaldo, N., Del Alcázar, P.S., Cardozo, C., Garcia-Vidal, C., Aguilar-Company, J., Larrosa, N., Uyan-Onal, A., Nazli-Zeka, A., Eylul, D., Turkey, I., Clemencia Correa, L., de Freitas, W.V., da Silva Machado, A.A., Institut Català de la Salut, [Albasanz-Puig A, Gudiol C] Departament de Malalties Infeccioses, Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge, Barcelona, Spain. Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica de Bellvitge (IDIBELL), Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain. Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. Spanish Network for Research in Infectious Diseases (REIPI), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain. [Parody R] Departament d’hematologia, Institut Català d' Oncologia (ICO) Barcelona, Spain. Hospital Duran i Reynals, Barcelona, Spain. . Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica de Bellvitge (IDIBELL), Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain. [Tebe C] Servei d’estadística, Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica de Bellvitge (IDIBELL), Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain. Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Barcelona, Spain. [Akova M] Infectious Diseases Department, Hacettepe University School of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey. [Araos R] Infectious Diseases Department, Instituto de Ciencias e Innovación en Medicina, Facultad de Medicina, Clínica Alemana, Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago de Chile, Chile. [Ruiz-Camps I] Servei de Malalties Infeccioses, Hospital Universitari Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona, Spain, Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus, and Ege Üniversitesi
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Microbiological Phenomena::Drug Resistance, Microbial [PHENOMENA AND PROCESSES] ,Research design ,infecciones bacterianas y micosis::infecciones bacterianas y micosis::infección::sepsis::bacteriemia [ENFERMEDADES] ,bacteraemia ,Time Factors ,modelos logísticos ,International Cooperation ,humanos ,resistencia a medicamentos ,Drug Resistance ,Bacteremia ,Bacteria::bacterias gramnegativas::bacterias aerobias gramnegativas::bacilos y cocos aerobios gramnegativos::Pseudomonadaceae::Pseudomonas::Pseudomonas aeruginosa [ORGANISMOS] ,bloodstream infection ,multidrug-resistant ,neutropenia ,onco-haematological patients ,pseudomonas aeruginosa ,estudios multicéntricos como asunto ,Bacterièmia ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bacteria::Gram-Negative Bacteria::Gram-Negative Aerobic Bacteria::Gram-Negative Aerobic Rods and Cocci::Pseudomonadaceae::Pseudomonas::Pseudomonas aeruginosa [ORGANISMS] ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Neoplasms ,Clinical endpoint ,Onco-haematological patients ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Multidrug-resistant ,Microorganismes - Resistència als medicaments ,Otros calificadores::Otros calificadores::/inmunología [Otros calificadores] ,030212 general & internal medicine ,neoplasias ,0303 health sciences ,Neutropènia ,fenómenos microbiológicos::farmacorresistencia microbiana [FENÓMENOS Y PROCESOS] ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,bacteriemia ,General Medicine ,Bacterial Infections and Mycoses::Bacterial Infections and Mycoses::Infection::Sepsis::Bacteremia [DISEASES] ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Malalts de càncer ,Observational Studies as Topic ,Research Design ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Ceftolozane ,antibacterianos ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tazobactam ,Neutropenia ,Pseudomones aeruginosa ,Bloodstream infection ,03 medical and health sciences ,factores de tiempo ,Other subheadings::Other subheadings::/immunology [Other subheadings] ,Internal medicine ,Pseudomonas ,medicine ,Humans ,Pseudomonas Infections ,Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use ,Bacteremia/drug therapy ,Bacteremia/mortality ,Cephalosporins/therapeutic use ,Logistic Models ,Neoplasms/complications ,Neutropenia/complications ,Pseudomonas Infections/drug therapy ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa/isolation & purification ,Retrospective Studies ,Tazobactam/therapeutic use ,Resistència als medicaments ,infecciones por Pseudomonas ,cefalosporinas ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,estudios retrospectivos ,enfermedades hematológicas y linfáticas::enfermedades hematológicas::trastornos leucocitarios::leucopenia::agranulocitosis::neutropenia [ENFERMEDADES] ,cooperación internacional ,Retrospective cohort study ,Cancer patients ,medicine.disease ,Cephalosporins ,Drug resistance ,Hemic and Lymphatic Diseases::Hematologic Diseases::Leukocyte Disorders::Leukopenia::Agranulocytosis::Neutropenia [DISEASES] ,Bacteraemia ,Observational study ,business ,diseño de la investigación - Abstract
The IRONIC study group: Cuervo, Guillermo; Escrihuela-Vidal, Francesc; Tubau, Fe; Rodriguez Arias, Marisol; Merve Ayaz, Caglayan; Munita, Jose; Gasch, Oriol; Capilla, Silvia; Bochud, Pierre-Yves; Manuel, Oriol; Torre-Cisneros, Julian; Tabares, Salvador; Serrano Lopez, Josefina; Maschmeyer, Georg; Torres, Diego; Abdala, Edson; Bittencourt, Driele Peixoto; El Zein, Saeed; Jabbour, Jean-Francois; Bertz, Hartmut; Peyerl-Hoffmann, Gabriele; Lizasoain, Manuel; Maria Aguado, Jose; Clemencia Correa, Lina; Palop, Begona; Fortun, Jesus; Magnasco, Laura; Cespedes, Roberto; Lopez-Soria, Leire; Pablo Horcajada, Juan; Montaguti, Mia Hold; de Cueto, Marina; Rodriguez-Bano, Jesus; Greco, Raffaella; Cichero, Paola; Bassetti, Matteo; Castaldo, Nadia; Sangro del Alcazar, Paloma; Cardozo, Celia; Garcia-Vidal, Carolina; Aguilar-Company, Juan; Larrosa, Nieves; Uyan-Onal, Ayse; Nazli-Zeka, Arzu; Vasconcelos de Freitas, Wania; da Silva Machado, Amanda Aparecida, [Introduction]: Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) has historically been one of the major causes of severe sepsis and death among neutropenic cancer patients. There has been a recent increase of multidrug-resistant PA (MDRPA) isolates that may determine a worse prognosis, particularly in immunosuppressed patients. The aim of this study is to establish the impact of antibiotic resistance on the outcome of neutropenic onco-haematological patients with PA bacteraemia, and to identify the risk factors for MDRPA bacteraemia and mortality., [Methods and analysis]: This is a retrospective, observational, multicentre, international study. All episodes of PA bacteraemia occurring in neutropenic oncohaematological patients followed up at the participating centres from 1 January 2006 to 31 May 2018 will be retrospectively reviewed. The primary end point will be overall case-fatality rate within 30 days of onset of PA bacteraemia. The secondary end points will be to describe the following: the incidence and risk factors for multidrugresistant and extremely drug-resistant PA bacteraemia (by comparing the episodes due to susceptible PA with those produced by MDRPA), the efficacy of ceftolozane/tazobactam, the rates of persistent bacteraemia and bacteraemia relapse and the risk factors for very early (48 hours), early (7 days) and overall (30 days) case-fatality rates., [Ethics and dissemination]: The Clinical Research Ethics Committee of Bellvitge University Hospital approved the protocol of the study at the primary site. To protect personal privacy, identifying information of each patient in the electronic database will be encrypted. The processing of the patients’ personal data collected in the study will comply with the Spanish Data Protection Act of 1998 and with the European Directive on the privacy of data. All data collected, stored and processed will be anonymised. Results will be reported at conferences and in peerreviewed publications., This study was supported by Plan Nacional de I+D+i 2013‐2016 and Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Subdirección General de Redes y Centros de Investigación Cooperativa, Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad, Spanish Network for Research in Infectious Diseases (REIPI RD16/0016/0001) and co-financed by European Development Regional Fund “A way to achieve Europe”, Operative Programme Intelligent Growth 2014‐2020.
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- 2019
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23. Chorioamnionitis of unusual etiology.
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Martínez-Rienda I, García-Manuz R, Azpiazu-Monterrubio P, and López-Soria L
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- 2024
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24. In Vitro Antifungal Activity of Ibrexafungerp (SCY-078) Against Contemporary Blood Isolates From Medically Relevant Species of Candida : A European Study.
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Quindós G, Miranda-Cadena K, San-Millán R, Borroto-Esoda K, Cantón E, Linares-Sicilia MJ, Hamprecht A, Montesinos I, Tortorano AM, Prigitano A, Vidal-García M, Marcos-Arias C, Guridi A, Sanchez-Reus F, Machuca-Bárcena J, Rodríguez-Iglesias MA, Martín-Mazuelos E, Castro-Méndez C, López-Soria L, Ruiz-Gaitán A, Fernandez-Rivero M, Lorenzo D, Capilla J, Rezusta A, Pemán J, Guarro J, Pereira J, Pais C, Romeo O, Ezpeleta G, Jauregizar N, Angulo D, and Eraso E
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- Candida, Candida albicans, Candida glabrata, Candida parapsilosis, Candida tropicalis, Fluconazole pharmacology, Glycosides, Micafungin, Triterpenes, Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Candidiasis, Invasive microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Ibrexafungerp (SCY-078) is the newest oral and intravenous antifungal drug with broad activity, currently undergoing clinical trials for invasive candidiasis., Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the in vitro activity of ibrexafungerp and comparators against a collection of 434 European blood isolates of Candida ., Methods: Ibrexafungerp, caspofungin, fluconazole, and micafungin minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) were collected from 12 European laboratories for 434 blood isolates, including 163 Candida albicans , 108 Candida parapsilosis , 60 Candida glabrata , 40 Candida tropicalis , 29 Candida krusei , 20 Candida orthopsilosis , 6 Candida guilliermondii , 2 Candida famata , 2 Candida lusitaniae , and 1 isolate each of Candida bracarensis, Candida catenulata , Candida dubliniensis , and Candida kefyr . MICs were determined by the EUCAST broth microdilution method, and isolates were classified according to recommended clinical breakpoints and epidemiological cutoffs. Additionally, 22 Candida auris from different clinical specimens were evaluated., Results: Ibrexafungerp MICs ranged from 0.016 to ≥8 mg/L. The lowest ibrexafungerp MICs were observed for C. albicans (geometric MIC 0.062 mg/L, MIC range 0.016-0.5 mg/L) and the highest ibrexafungerp MICs were observed for C. tropicalis (geometric MIC 0.517 mg/L, MIC range 0.06-≥8 mg/L). Modal MICs/MIC
50 s (mg/L) against Candida spp. were 0.125/0.06 for C. albicans , 0.5/0.5 for C. parapsilosis , 0.25/0.25 for C. glabrata , 0.5/0.5 for C. tropicalis , 1/1 for C. krusei , 4/2 for C. orthopsilosis , and 0.5/0.5 for C. auris . Ibrexafungerp showed activity against fluconazole- and echinocandin-resistant isolates. If adopting wild-type upper limits, a non-wild-type phenotype for ibrexafungerp was only observed for 16/434 (3.7%) isolates: 11 (4.6%) C. parapsilosis , 4 (5%) C. glabrata , and 1 (2.5%) C. tropicalis ., Conclusion: Ibrexafungerp showed a potent in vitro activity against Candida ., Competing Interests: Outside the current study, we declare the following potential conflicts: GQ has received research grants from Astellas Pharma, Pfizer, Merck Sharp & Dohme, and SCYNEXIS. GQ has served on advisory/consultant boards for Merck, Sharp & Dohme, and SCYNEXIS, and he has received speaker honoraria from Abbvie, Astellas Pharma, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Pfizer, and SCYNEXIS. KB-E and DA are employed by SCYNEXIS. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Quindós, Miranda-Cadena, San-Millán, Borroto-Esoda, Cantón, Linares-Sicilia, Hamprecht, Montesinos, Tortorano, Prigitano, Vidal-García, Marcos-Arias, Guridi, Sanchez-Reus, Machuca-Bárcena, Rodríguez-Iglesias, Martín-Mazuelos, Castro-Méndez, López-Soria, Ruiz-Gaitán, Fernandez-Rivero, Lorenzo, Capilla, Rezusta, Pemán, Guarro, Pereira, Pais, Romeo, Ezpeleta, Jauregizar, Angulo and Eraso.)- Published
- 2022
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25. Azole resistance survey on clinical Aspergillus fumigatus isolates in Spain.
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Escribano P, Rodríguez-Sánchez B, Díaz-García J, Martín-Gómez MT, Ibáñez-Martínez E, Rodríguez-Mayo M, Peláez T, García-Gómez de la Pedrosa E, Tejero-García R, Marimón JM, Reigadas E, Rezusta A, Labayru-Echeverría C, Pérez-Ayala A, Ayats J, Cobo F, Pazos C, López-Soria L, Alastruey-Izquierdo A, Muñoz P, and Guinea J
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- Aspergillosis epidemiology, Fungal Proteins genetics, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Spain epidemiology, Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Aspergillosis microbiology, Aspergillus fumigatus drug effects, Aspergillus fumigatus genetics, Azoles pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Fungal
- Abstract
Objectives: We aimed to assess the percentage of azole resistance in Aspergillus fumigatus in Spain., Methods: Thirty participating Spanish hospitals stored all morphologically identified A. fumigatus sensu lato clinical isolates-regardless their clinical significance-from 15 February to 14 May 2019. Isolates showing azole resistance according to the EUCAST 9.3.2 methodology were molecularly identified and the cyp51A gene was studied in A. fumigatus sensu stricto isolates., Results: Eight hundred and forty-seven isolates from 725 patients were collected in 29 hospitals (A. fumigatus sensu stricto (n = 828) and cryptic species (n = 19)). Isolates were mostly from the lower respiratory tract (94.0%; 797/847). Only cryptic species were amphotericin B resistant. Sixty-three (7.4%) out of the 847 isolates were resistant to ≥1 azole(s). Azole resistance was higher in cryptic species than in A. fumigatus sensu stricto (95%, 18/19 vs. 5.5%, 45/828); isavuconazole was associated to the lowest number of non-wild type isolates. The dominant mechanism of resistance was the presence of TR
34 -L98H substitutions (n = 24 out of 63). Out of the 725 patients, 48 (6.6%) carried either cryptic species (n = 14) or A. fumigatus sensu stricto (n = 34; 4.7%) resistant isolates. Aspergillus fumigatus sensu stricto harbouring either the TR34 -L98H (n = 19) or TR46 /Y121F/T289A (n = 1) mutations were detected in patients in hospitals located at 7/24 studied cities., Discussion: Of the patients, 6.6% carry azole-resistant A. fumigatus sensu lato isolates in Spain. TR34 -L98H is the dominant cyp51A gene substitutions, although its presence is not widespread., (Copyright © 2020 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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26. Do high MICs predict the outcome in invasive fusariosis?
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Nucci M, Jenks J, Thompson GR, Hoenigl M, Dos Santos MC, Forghieri F, Rico JC, Bonuomo V, López-Soria L, Lass-Flörl C, Candoni A, Garcia-Vidal C, Cattaneo C, Buil J, Rabagliati R, Roiz MP, Gudiol C, Fracchiolla N, Campos-Herrero MI, Delia M, Farina F, Fortun J, Nadali G, Sastre E, Colombo AL, Pérez Nadales E, Alastruey-Izquierdo A, and Pagano L
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- Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Humans, Itraconazole, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Retrospective Studies, Voriconazole pharmacology, Fusariosis drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Invasive fusariosis (IF) affects mostly severely immunocompromised hosts and is associated with poor outcome. Since Fusarium species exhibit high MICs for most antifungal agents, this could explain the poor prognosis. However, a clear-cut correlation between MIC and outcome has not been established., Objective: To evaluate the correlation between MIC and outcome (6 week death rate) in patients with IF., Methods: We performed a multicentre retrospective study of patients with IF who received treatment and had MIC levels determined by EUCAST or CLSI for the drug(s) used during treatment. We compared the MIC50 and MIC distribution among survivors and patients who died within 6 weeks from the diagnosis of IF., Results: Among 88 patients with IF, 74 had haematological diseases. Primary treatment was monotherapy in 52 patients (voriconazole in 27) and combination therapy in 36 patients (liposomal amphotericin B + voriconazole in 23). The MIC50 and range for the five most frequent agents tested were: voriconazole 8 mg/L (range 0.5-64), amphotericin B 2 mg/L (range 0.25-64), posaconazole 16 mg/L (range 0.5-64), itraconazole 32 mg/L (range 4-64), and isavuconazole 32 mg/L (range 8-64). There was no difference in MIC50 and MIC distribution among survivors and patients who died. By contrast, persistent neutropenia and receipt of corticosteroids were strong predictors of 6 week mortality., Conclusions: Our study did not show any correlation between MIC and mortality at 6 weeks in patients with IF., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2021
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27. Characterization and outcome of invasive infections due to Paecilomyces variotii: analysis of patients from the FungiScope® registry and literature reports.
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Sprute R, Salmanton-García J, Sal E, Malaj X, Falces-Romero I, Hatvani L, Heinemann M, Klimko N, López-Soria L, Meletiadis J, Shruti M, Steinmann J, Seidel D, Cornely OA, and Stemler J
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- Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Byssochlamys, Humans, Registries, Voriconazole, Mycoses drug therapy, Mycoses epidemiology, Paecilomyces
- Abstract
Objectives: To provide a basis for clinical management decisions in Paecilomyces variotii infection., Methods: Unpublished cases of invasive P. variotii infection from the FungiScope® registry and all cases reported in the literature were analysed., Results: We identified 59 cases with P. variotii infection. Main baseline factors were presence of indwelling devices in 29 cases (49.2%), particularly peritoneal catheters (33.9%) and prosthetic heart valves (10.2%), haematological or oncological diseases in 19 (32.2%), major surgery in 11 (18.6%), and diabetes mellitus in 10 cases (16.9%). The most prevalent infection sites were peritoneum (n = 20, 33.3%) and lungs (n = 16, 27.1%). Pain and fever were frequent (n = 35, 59.3% and n = 33, 55.9%, respectively). Diagnosis was established by culture in 58 cases (98.3%). P. variotii caused breakthrough infection in 8 patients. Systemic antifungals were given in 52 patients (88.1%). Amphotericin B was administered in 39, itraconazole in 15, and posaconazole in 8 patients. Clinical isolates were frequently resistant to voriconazole, whereas the above-mentioned antifungals showed good in vitro activity. Infections of the blood and CNS caused high mortality. Overall mortality was 28.8% and death was attributed to P. variotii in 10 cases., Conclusions: P. variotii causes life-threatening infections, especially in immunocompromised and critically ill patients with indwelling devices. Patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis are at particular risk. Multidisciplinary management is paramount, including molecular techniques for diagnosis and treatment with efficacious systemic antifungals. Amphotericin B, itraconazole and posaconazole are regarded as treatments of choice. Combination with flucytosine may be considered. Surgical debridement and removal of indwelling devices facilitate favourable outcome., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy.)
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- 2021
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28. Skin infection after contact with waste water.
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Peña Merino L, López Soria L, Acebo Mariñas E, and Gardeazabal García J
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- Humans, Skin Diseases, Infectious etiology, Wastewater
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- 2020
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29. Skin lesion and lymphangitis in an immunocompetent patient.
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López-Soria L, Aguirrebengoa Ibarguren K, Ratón Nieto JA, and Barrios Andrés JL
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- Accidental Falls, Adult, Animals, Animals, Domestic, Cellulitis etiology, Granuloma etiology, Granuloma microbiology, Humans, Lymphadenopathy etiology, Male, Superinfection etiology, Tinea complications, Tinea microbiology, Immunocompetence, Knee Injuries microbiology, Lymphangitis etiology, Tinea diagnosis, Trichophyton isolation & purification, Wound Infection microbiology
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- 2019
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30. Role of age and comorbidities in mortality of patients with infective endocarditis.
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Armiñanzas C, Fariñas-Alvarez C, Zarauza J, Muñoz P, González Ramallo V, Martínez Sellés M, Miró Meda JM, Pericás JM, Goenaga MÁ, Ojeda Burgos G, Rodríguez Álvarez R, Castelo Corral L, Gálvez-Acebal J, Martínez Marcos FJ, Fariñas MC, Fernández Sánchez F, Noureddine M, Rosas G, de la Torre Lima J, Aramendi J, Bereciartua E, Blanco MJ, Blanco R, Boado MV, Campaña Lázaro M, Crespo A, Goikoetxea J, Iruretagoyena JR, Irurzun Zuazabal J, López-Soria L, Montejo M, Nieto J, Rodrigo D, Rodríguez D, Rodríguez R, Vitoria Y, Voces R, García López MV, Georgieva RI, Ojeda G, Rodríguez Bailón I, Ruiz Morales J, Cuende AM, Echeverría T, Fuerte A, Gaminde E, Goenaga MÁ, Idígoras P, Iribarren JA, Izaguirre Yarza A, Kortajarena Urkola X, Reviejo C, Carrasco R, Climent V, Llamas P, Merino E, Plazas J, Reus S, Álvarez N, Bravo-Ferrer JM, Castelo L, Cuenca J, Llinares P, Miguez Rey E, Rodríguez Mayo M, Sánchez E, Sousa Regueiro D, Martínez FJ, Alonso MDM, Castro B, García Rosado D, Durán MDC, Miguel Gómez MA, Lacalzada J, Nassar I, Plata Ciezar A, Reguera Iglesias JM, Asensi Álvarez V, Costas C, de la Hera J, Fernández Suárez J, Iglesias Fraile L, León Arguero V, López Menéndez J, Mencia Bajo P, Morales C, Moreno Torrico A, Palomo C, Paya Martínez B, Rodríguez Esteban Á, Rodríguez García R, Telenti Asensio M, Almela M, Ambrosioni J, Azqueta M, Brunet M, Bodro M, Cartañá R, Falces C, Fita G, Fuster D, García de la Mària C, Hernández-Meneses M, Llopis Pérez J, Marco F, Miró JM, Moreno A, Nicolás D, Ninot S, Quintana E, Paré C, Pereda D, Pericás JM, Pomar JL, Ramírez J, Rovira I, Sandoval E, Sitges M, Soy D, Téllez A, Tolosana JM, Vidal B, Vila J, Adán I, Bermejo J, Bouza E, Celemín D, Cuerpo Caballero G, Delgado Montero A, Fernández Cruz A, García Mansilla A, García Leoni ME, González Ramallo V, Kestler Hernández M, Hualde AM, Marín M, Martínez-Sellés M, Menárguez MC, Muñoz P, Rincón C, Rodríguez-Abella H, Rodríguez-Créixems M, Pinilla B, Pinto Á, Valerio M, Vázquez P, Verde Moreno E, Antorrena I, Loeches B, Martín Quirós A, Moreno M, Ramírez U, Rial Bastón V, Romero M, Saldaña A, Agüero Balbín J, Amado C, Armiñanzas Castillo C, Arnaiz García A, Cobo Belaustegui M, Fariñas MC, Fariñas-Álvarez C, Gómez Izquierdo R, García I, González-Rico C, Gutiérrez-Cuadra M, Gutiérrez Díez J, Pajarón M, Parra JA, Sarralde A, Teira R, Zarauza J, Domínguez F, García Pavía P, González J, Orden B, Ramos A, Centella T, Hermida JM, Moya JL, Martín-Dávila P, Navas E, Oliva E, Del Río A, Ruiz S, Hidalgo Tenorio C, Almendro Delia M, Araji O, Barquero JM, Calvo Jambrina R, de Cueto M, Gálvez Acebal J, Méndez I, Morales I, López-Cortés LE, de Alarcón A, García E, Haro JL, Lepe JA, López F, Luque R, Alonso LJ, Azcárate P, Azcona Gutiérrez JM, Blanco JR, García-Álvarez L, Oteo JA, Sanz M, de Benito N, Gurguí M, Pacho C, Pericas R, Pons G, Álvarez M, Fernández AL, Martínez A, Prieto A, Regueiro B, Tijeira E, Vega M, Canut Blasco A, Cordo Mollar J, Gainzarain Arana JC, García Uriarte O, Martín López A, Ortiz de Zárate Z, Urturi Matos JA, García Domínguez G, Sánchez-Porto A, Arribas Leal JM, García Vázquez E, Hernández Torres A, Blázquez A, de la Morena Valenzuela G, Alonso Á, Aramburu J, Calvo FE, Moreno Rodríguez A, Tarabini-Castellani P, Heredero Gálvez E, Maicas Bellido C, Largo Pau J, Sepúlveda MA, Toledano Sierra P, Iqbal-Mirza SZ, Cascales Alcolea E, Egea Serrano P, Hernández Roca JJ, Keituqwa Yañez I, Peláez Ballesta A, Soriano V, Moreno Escobar E, Peña Monje A, Sánchez Cabrera V, Vinuesa García D, Arrizabalaga Asenjo M, Cifuentes Luna C, Núñez Morcillo J, Pérez Seco MC, Villoslada Gelabert A, Aured Guallar C, Fernández Abad N, García Mangas P, Matamala Adell M, Palacián Ruiz MP, Porres JC, Alcaraz Vidal B, Cobos Trigueros N, Del Amor Espín MJ, Giner Caro JA, Jiménez Sánchez R, Jimeno Almazán A, Ortín Freire A, Viqueira González M, Pericás Ramis P, Ribas Blanco MÁ, Ruiz de Gopegui Bordes E, Vidal Bonet L, Bellón Munera MC, Escribano Garaizabal E, Tercero Martínez A, and Segura Luque JC
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Area Under Curve, Databases, Factual, Endocarditis etiology, Female, Heart Failure mortality, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Prospective Studies, ROC Curve, Risk Factors, Spain epidemiology, Staphylococcal Infections mortality, Age Factors, Comorbidity, Endocarditis mortality
- Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to analyse the characteristics of patients with IE in three groups of age and to assess the ability of age and the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) to predict mortality., Methods: Prospective cohort study of all patients with IE included in the GAMES Spanish database between 2008 and 2015.Patients were stratified into three age groups:<65 years,65 to 80 years,and ≥ 80 years.The area under the receiver-operating characteristic (AUROC) curve was calculated to quantify the diagnostic accuracy of the CCI to predict mortality risk., Results: A total of 3120 patients with IE (1327 < 65 years;1291 65-80 years;502 ≥ 80 years) were enrolled.Fever and heart failure were the most common presentations of IE, with no differences among age groups.Patients ≥80 years who underwent surgery were significantly lower compared with other age groups (14.3%,65 years; 20.5%,65-79 years; 31.3%,≥80 years). In-hospital mortality was lower in the <65-year group (20.3%,<65 years;30.1%,65-79 years;34.7%,≥80 years;p < 0.001) as well as 1-year mortality (3.2%, <65 years; 5.5%, 65-80 years;7.6%,≥80 years; p = 0.003).Independent predictors of mortality were age ≥ 80 years (hazard ratio [HR]:2.78;95% confidence interval [CI]:2.32-3.34), CCI ≥ 3 (HR:1.62; 95% CI:1.39-1.88),and non-performed surgery (HR:1.64;95% CI:11.16-1.58).When the three age groups were compared,the AUROC curve for CCI was significantly larger for patients aged <65 years(p < 0.001) for both in-hospital and 1-year mortality., Conclusion: There were no differences in the clinical presentation of IE between the groups. Age ≥ 80 years, high comorbidity (measured by CCI),and non-performance of surgery were independent predictors of mortality in patients with IE.CCI could help to identify those patients with IE and surgical indication who present a lower risk of in-hospital and 1-year mortality after surgery, especially in the <65-year group., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2019
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31. Method-Dependent Epidemiological Cutoff Values for Detection of Triazole Resistance in Candida and Aspergillus Species for the Sensititre YeastOne Colorimetric Broth and Etest Agar Diffusion Methods.
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Espinel-Ingroff A, Turnidge J, Alastruey-Izquierdo A, Botterel F, Canton E, Castro C, Chen YC, Chen Y, Chryssanthou E, Dannaoui E, Garcia-Effron G, Gonzalez GM, Govender NP, Guinea J, Kidd S, Lackner M, Lass-Flörl C, Linares-Sicilia MJ, López-Soria L, Magobo R, Pelaez T, Quindós G, Rodriguez-Iglesia MA, Ruiz MA, Sánchez-Reus F, Sanguinetti M, Shields R, Szweda P, Tortorano A, Wengenack NL, Bramati S, Cavanna C, DeLuca C, Gelmi M, Grancini A, Lombardi G, Meletiadis J, Negri CE, Passera M, Peman J, Prigitano A, Sala E, and Tejada M
- Subjects
- Aspergillosis drug therapy, Aspergillosis epidemiology, Aspergillosis microbiology, Aspergillus classification, Aspergillus isolation & purification, Candida classification, Candida isolation & purification, Candidiasis drug therapy, Candidiasis epidemiology, Candidiasis microbiology, Disk Diffusion Antimicrobial Tests, Drug Resistance, Fungal, Fluconazole pharmacology, Humans, Immunocompromised Host, Itraconazole pharmacology, Voriconazole pharmacology, Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Aspergillus drug effects, Candida drug effects, Triazoles pharmacology
- Abstract
Although the Sensititre Yeast-One (SYO) and Etest methods are widely utilized, interpretive criteria are not available for triazole susceptibility testing of Candida or Aspergillus species. We collected fluconazole, itraconazole, posaconazole, and voriconazole SYO and Etest MICs from 39 laboratories representing all continents for (method/agent-dependent) 11,171 Candida albicans , 215 C. dubliniensis , 4,418 C. glabrata species complex, 157 C. guilliermondii ( Meyerozyma guilliermondii ), 676 C. krusei ( Pichia kudriavzevii ), 298 C. lusitaniae ( Clavispora lusitaniae ), 911 C. parapsilosis sensu stricto , 3,691 C. parapsilosis species complex, 36 C. metapsilosis , 110 C. orthopsilosis , 1,854 C. tropicalis , 244 Saccharomyces cerevisiae , 1,409 Aspergillus fumigatus , 389 A. flavus , 130 A. nidulans , 233 A. niger , and 302 A. terreus complex isolates. SYO/Etest MICs for 282 confirmed non-wild-type (non-WT) isolates were included: ERG11 ( C. albicans ), ERG11 and MRR1 ( C. parapsilosis ), cyp51A ( A. fumigatus ), and CDR2 and CDR1 overexpression ( C. albicans and C. glabrata , respectively). Interlaboratory modal agreement was superior by SYO for yeast species and by the Etest for Aspergillus spp. Distributions fulfilling CLSI criteria for epidemiological cutoff value (ECV) definition were pooled, and we proposed SYO ECVs for S. cerevisiae and 9 yeast and 3 Aspergillus species and Etest ECVs for 5 yeast and 4 Aspergillus species. The posaconazole SYO ECV of 0.06 µg/ml for C. albicans and the Etest itraconazole ECV of 2 µg/ml for A. fumigatus were the best predictors of non-WT isolates. These findings support the need for method-dependent ECVs, as, overall, the SYO appears to perform better for susceptibility testing of yeast species and the Etest appears to perform better for susceptibility testing of Aspergillus spp. Further evaluations should be conducted with more Candida mutants., (Copyright © 2018 American Society for Microbiology.)
- Published
- 2018
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32. Skin nodules in a liver transplant recipient.
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Blanco-Vidal MJ, López-Soria L, Monzón-de la Torre A, and Montejo-Baranda JM
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- Adult, Ascomycota genetics, Ascomycota ultrastructure, DNA, Fungal genetics, DNA, Fungal isolation & purification, Dermatomycoses etiology, Dermatomycoses microbiology, Dermatomycoses surgery, Humans, Hyphae ultrastructure, Immunosuppressive Agents adverse effects, Male, Postoperative Complications microbiology, Postoperative Complications pathology, Postoperative Complications surgery, Ascomycota isolation & purification, Dermatomycoses diagnosis, Liver Transplantation, Postoperative Complications diagnosis
- Published
- 2018
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33. Disseminated fusariosis and hematologic malignancies, a still devastating association. Report of three new cases.
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García-Ruiz JC, Olazábal I, Adán Pedroso RM, López-Soria L, Velasco-Benito V, Sánchez-Aparicio JA, Navajas A, Montejo M, and Moragues MD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Amphotericin B therapeutic use, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Fusariosis diagnosis, Fusariosis drug therapy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Voriconazole therapeutic use, Fusariosis complications, Hematologic Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Background: Fungi of the genus Fusarium are primarily plant pathogens and saprobes that produce disseminated infections in immunologically deficient humans. After aspergillosis, disseminated fusariosis is the second most common cause of invasive infection by filamentous fungi in patients with hematologic malignancies or those undergoing transplants of hematopoietic progenitors., Aims: Disseminated fusariosis (DF) is considered an extremely rare infection and has reached a stable incidence rate, but its high mortality rate and the lack of an optimal management protocol have raised increasing interest in this mycosis., Methods: We present three cases of DF produced by Fusarium oxysporum species complex, Fusarium solani species complex and the highly unusual Fusarium dimerum in patients with advanced hematological malignancies diagnosed in our hospital between 2007 and 2011. The species level identification of the Fusarium isolates was established by sequencing their TEF1 gene., Results: The isolates showed low susceptibility to most of the antifungal agents analyzed, except that observed for F. dimerum to amphotericin B (AmB) and terbinafine, and F. oxysporum species complex to AmB. Interestingly, the strain of F. solani species complex exhibited high MIC values for AmB and voriconazole, notwithstanding these drugs were used for treatment with good results. Other relevant aspects to be considered in the treatment of DF are surgically cleaning foci of infection, withdrawing presumably contaminated catheters and recovery from neutropenia., Conclusions: The prevention of infection in colonized patients, the maintenance of a high level of diagnostic suspicion for early diagnosis, and the combined, vigorous and prolonged use of L-AmB and voriconazole are essential to decrease the mortality rate of this devastating infection., (Copyright © 2014 Revista Iberoamericana de Micología. Published by Elsevier Espana. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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34. Invasive infections caused by Saprochaete capitata in patients with haematological malignancies: report of five cases and review of the antifungal therapy.
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García-Ruiz JC, López-Soria L, Olazábal I, Amutio E, Arrieta-Aguirre I, Velasco-Benito V, Pontón J, and Moragues MD
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- Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Burkitt Lymphoma complications, Burkitt Lymphoma drug therapy, Catheter-Related Infections drug therapy, Catheter-Related Infections microbiology, Cross Infection drug therapy, Dipodascus drug effects, Drug Resistance, Fungal, Drug Therapy, Combination, Fatal Outcome, Febrile Neutropenia chemically induced, Female, Fungemia drug therapy, Humans, Immunocompromised Host, Leukemia drug therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Opportunistic Infections drug therapy, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Cross Infection microbiology, Dipodascus isolation & purification, Fungemia microbiology, Leukemia complications, Opportunistic Infections microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Saprochaete capitata (formerly known as Geotrichum capitatum and Blastoschizomyces capitatus) is a ubiquitous fungus found in soil, water, air, plants and dairy products. It colonizes the skin, and bronchial and intestinal tract of healthy people producing serious opportunistic infections in patients with haematological malignancies, especially in those with acute leukaemia. Since 1960s its presence is being increasingly recognized in this group of patients. The clinical spectrum of S. capitata disseminated infections is very similar to that produced by Candida, being easily misinterpreted. The associated high mortality and low susceptibility to fluconazole and echinocandins of S. capitata require the acknowledgement of this emergent infection so that it can be properly treated., Case Report: We report 5 new cases of S. capitata disseminated infection in patients with advanced haematological malignancies observed in the haematology unit between the years 2004 and 2010, and review the state-of-the-art for diagnosis and treatment of this infection., Conclusions: Based on our experience, the prophylactic use of or the empirical antifungal treatment with fluconazole and/or echinocandins would not be adequate for oncohaematological patients in those hospitals where S. capitata infection may be highly prevalent., (Copyright © 2012 Revista Iberoamericana de Micología. Published by Elsevier Espana. All rights reserved.)
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- 2013
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35. Comparative genet survival after fire in woody Mediterranean species.
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López-Soria L and Castell C
- Abstract
Using data from three fires in northeastern Spain, we tested a condition necessary to support the idea that fire has been a factor in the evolution of the resprouting habit: populations of all resprouting species within a community should show high levels of genet survival after fires and show a low coefficient of variation. Species with high mean survival values were:Quercus ilex L.,Phillyrea latifolia L., andViburnum tinus L., with 88, 86 and 83% survival respectively; these groups had resprouts emerging from rootcrowns. Then followedArbutus unedo L. (75%),Pistacia lentiscus L. (73%),Erica arborea L. (77%),Erica multiflora L. (57%) andJuniperus oxycedrus L. (55%). This last group had resprouts from lignotubers or burls. These two groups also differed in the variability around the mean: the first showed a lower coefficient of variation, 6-12, and the second ranged from 19 to 26. Slope exposure had no significant influence on the process of resprouting, but soil depth did, with precipitation as a covariate. In the shallow soil category, the difference in genet survival between southern and northern exposures was 14% (71% vs. 57%); while the difference in the deep soil category was low, 5% (87% vs. 82%). There was no significant interaction. The component of variance for soils was larger than that for species-specific effects; substantial overlap of the within-species variance indicated that species responded as if they were a single hypothetical population, in which most of the variation in chances of survival was due to the soil conditions. The possession of the resprouting habit did not ensure a high performance. Hence, we find weak support for fire as a factor in the evolution of the resprouting habit.
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- 1992
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