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Azole-Resistant Aspergillus fumigatus Among Danish Cystic Fibrosis Patients: Increasing Prevalence and Dominance of TR 34 /L98H.

Authors :
Risum M
Hare RK
Gertsen JB
Kristensen L
Johansen HK
Helweg-Larsen J
Abou-Chakra N
Pressler T
Skov M
Jensen-Fangel S
Arendrup MC
Source :
Frontiers in microbiology [Front Microbiol] 2020 Aug 13; Vol. 11, pp. 1850. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Aug 13 (Print Publication: 2020).
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Azole-resistant (azole-R) Aspergillus is an increasing challenge worldwide. Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) are at risk of Aspergillus colonization and disease due to a favorable lung environment for microorganisms. We performed a nationwide study in 2018 of azole-non-susceptible Aspergillus in CF patients and compared with data from two prior studies. All airway samples with mold isolates from patients monitored at the two CF centers in Denmark (RH, Jan-Sept and AUH, Jan-Jun) were included. Classical species identification (morphology and thermo-tolerance) was performed and MALDI-TOF/β-tubulin sequencing was performed if needed. Susceptibility was determined using EUCAST E.Def 10.1, and E.Def 9.3.2. cyp51A sequencing and STR Af genotyping were performed for azole-non-susceptible isolates and relevant sequential isolates. In total, 340 mold isolates from 159 CF patients were obtained. The most frequent species were Aspergillus fumigatus (266/340, 78.2%) and Aspergillus terreus (26/340, 7.6%). Azole-R A. fumigatus was cultured from 7.3% (10/137) of patients, including 9.5% (9/95) of patients at RH and 2.4% at AUH (1/42), respectively. In a 10-year perspective, azole-non-susceptibility increased numerically among patients at RH (10.5% in 2018 vs 4.5% in 2007-2009). Cyp51A resistance mechanisms were found in nine azole-R A. fumigatus from eight CF patients. Five were of environmental origin (TR <subscript>34</subscript> /L98H), three were human medicine-driven (two M220K and one M220R), and one was novel (TR <subscript>34</subscript> <superscript>3</superscript> /L98H) and found in a patient who also harbored a TR <subscript>34</subscript> /L98H isolate. STR Af genotyping identified 27 unique genotypes among 45 isolates and ≥2 genotypes in 8 of 12 patients. This included one patient carrying two unique TR <subscript>34</subscript> /L98H isolates, a rare phenomenon. Genotyping of sequential TR <subscript>34</subscript> <superscript>3</superscript> /L98H and TR <subscript>34</subscript> /L98H isolates from the same patient showed only minor differences in 1/9 markers. Finally, azole-R A. terreus was found in three patients including two with Cyp51A alterations (M217I and G51A, respectively). Azole-R A. fumigatus is increasing among CF patients in Denmark with the environmentally associated resistance TR <subscript>34</subscript> /L98H mechanism being dominant. Mixed infections (wildtype/non-wildtype and several non-wildtypes) and a case of potential additional tandem repeat acquisition in vivo were found. However, similar genotypes were identified from another patient (and outside this study), potentially suggesting a predominant TR <subscript>34</subscript> /L98H clone in DK. These findings suggest an increasing prevalence and complexity of azole resistance in A. fumigatus .<br /> (Copyright © 2020 Risum, Hare, Gertsen, Kristensen, Johansen, Helweg-Larsen, Abou-Chakra, Pressler, Skov, Jensen-Fangel and Arendrup.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1664-302X
Volume :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Frontiers in microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32903400
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.01850