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Environmental Clonal Spread of Azole-Resistant Candida parapsilosis with Erg11-Y132F Mutation Causing a Large Candidemia Outbreak in a Brazilian Cancer Referral Center

Authors :
João Nobrega de Almeida
Gabrielle O. M. H. Carvalho
Maristela Pinheiro Freire
Carlos Henrique Camargo
Gil Benard
Gilda Maria Barbaro Del Negro
Edson Abdala
Danilo Yamamoto Thomaz
Amir Arastehfar
David S. Perlin
Flavia Rossi
Maria Emilia B. de Souza
Odeli Nicole Encinas Sejas
Viviane Mazo Fávero Gimenes
Adriana Lopes Motta
Source :
Journal of Fungi, Vol 7, Iss 259, p 259 (2021), Journal of Fungi, Volume 7, Issue 4
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Clonal outbreaks due to azole-resistant Candida parapsilosis (ARCP) isolates have been reported in numerous studies, but the environmental niche of such isolates has yet to be defined. Herein, we aimed to identify the environmental niche of ARCP isolates causing unremitting clonal outbreaks in an adult ICU from a Brazilian cancer referral center. C. parapsilosis sensu stricto isolates recovered from blood cultures, pericatheter skins, healthcare workers (HCW), and nosocomial surfaces were genotyped by multilocus microsatellite typing (MLMT). Antifungal susceptibility testing was performed by the EUCAST (European Committee for Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing) broth microdilution reference method and ERG11 was sequenced to determine the azole resistance mechanism. Approximately 68% of isolates were fluconazole-resistant (76/112), including pericatheter skins (3/3, 100%), blood cultures (63/70, 90%), nosocomial surfaces (6/11, 54.5%), and HCW’s hands (4/28, 14.2%). MLMT revealed five clusters: the major cluster contained 88.2% of ARCP isolates (67/76) collected from blood (57/70), bed (2/2), pericatheter skin (2/3), from carts (3/7), and HCW’s hands (3/27). ARCP isolates were associated with a higher 30 day crude mortality rate (63.8%) than non-ARCP ones (20%, p = 0.008), and resisted two environmental decontamination attempts using quaternary ammonium. This study for the first time identified ARCP isolates harboring the Erg11-Y132F mutation from nosocomial surfaces and HCW’s hands, which were genetically identical to ARCP blood isolates. Therefore, it is likely that persisting clonal outbreak due to ARCP isolates was fueled by environmental sources. The resistance of Y132F ARCP isolates to disinfectants, and their potential association with a high mortality rate, warrant vigilant source control using effective environmental decontamination.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
7
Issue :
259
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Fungi
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0676545f542b062b8d9138b01f3d826b