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Blood and intra-abdominal Candida spp. from a multicentre study conducted in Madrid using EUCAST: emergence of fluconazole resistance in Candida parapsilosis, low echinocandin resistance and absence of Candida auris

Authors :
Judith, Díaz-García
Ana, Gómez
Marina, Machado
Luis, Alcalá
Elena, Reigadas
Carlos, Sánchez-Carrillo
Ana, Pérez-Ayala
Elia, Gómez-García De La Pedrosa
Fernando, González-Romo
María Soledad, Cuétara
Coral, García-Esteban
Inmaculada, Quiles-Melero
Nelly Daniela, Zurita
María, Muñoz-Algarra
María Teresa, Durán-Valle
Aída, Sánchez-García
Patricia, Muñoz
Pilar, Escribano
Jesús, Guinea
Arturo Manuel Fraile, Torres
Source :
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy. 77(11)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objectives We prospectively monitored the epidemiology and antifungal susceptibility of Candida spp. from blood cultures and intra-abdominal samples in patients admitted to hospitals in the Madrid area. Methods Between 2019 and 2021, we prospectively collected incident isolates [one per species, patient and compartment (blood cultures versus intra-abdominal samples)] from patients admitted to any of 16 hospitals located in Madrid. We studied the antifungal susceptibilities to amphotericin B, triazoles, micafungin, anidulafungin and ibrexafungerp following the EUCAST E.Def 7.3.2 procedure. Results A total of 2107 Candida spp. isolates (1895 patients) from blood cultures (51.7%) and intra-abdominal samples were collected. Candida albicans, the Candida glabrata complex, the Candida parapsilosis complex, Candida tropicalis and Candida krusei accounted for 96.9% of the isolates; in contrast, Candida auris was undetected. Fluconazole resistance in Candida spp. was higher in blood cultures than in intra-abdominal samples (9.1% versus 8.2%; P > 0.05), especially for the C. parapsilosis complex (16.6% versus 3.6%, P 0.05). Resistance rates have risen, particularly for fluconazole in blood culture isolates, which increased sharply in 2021. Ibrexafungerp showed in vitro activity against most isolates. Species distributions and resistance rates varied among hospitals. Conclusions Whereas no C. auris isolates were detected, fluconazole-resistant C. parapsilosis isolates have been spreading across the region and this has pulled up the rate of fluconazole resistance. In contrast, the rate of echinocandin resistance continues to be low.

Details

ISSN :
14602091
Volume :
77
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....67616142bf64c95fae323d1c1969d5e5