Candidemia in a Brazilian tertiary care hospital: species distribution and antifungal susceptibility patterns

Authors

  • Ana Graciela Ventura Antunes Fundação Faculdade Federal de Ciências Médicas de Porto Alegre; Microbiology Department
  • Alessandro Comarú Pasqualotto Santa Casa Complexo Hospitalar; Infection Control Department
  • María Cristina Diaz Universidad de Chile; Microbiology and Mycology Service
  • Pedro Alves d'Azevedo Fundação Faculdade Federal de Ciências Médicas de Porto Alegre; Microbiology Department
  • Luiz Carlos Severo Santa Casa Complexo Hospitalar; Clinical Mycology Laboratory

Keywords:

Candidemia, Candida species, Antifungal resistance, Susceptibility tests

Abstract

Recent studies have shown differences in the epidemiology of invasive infections caused by Candida species worldwide. In the period comprising August 2002 to August 2003, we performed a study in Santa Casa Complexo Hospitalar, Brazil, to determine Candida species distribution associated with candidemia and their antifungal susceptibility profiles to amphotericin B, fluconazole and itraconazole. Antifungal susceptibility was tested according to the broth microdilution method described in the NCCLS (M27A-2 method). Only one sample from each patient was analyzed (the first isolate). Most of the episodes had been caused by species other than C. albicans (51.6%), including C. parapsilosis (25.8%), C. tropicalis (13.3%), C. glabrata (3.3%), C. krusei (1.7%), and others (7.5%). Dose-dependent susceptibility to itraconazole was observed in 14.2% of strains, and dose-dependent susceptibility to fluconazole was found in 1.6%. Antifungal resistance was not found, probably related to low use of fluconazole. Further epidemiological surveillance is needed.

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Published

2004-10-01

Issue

Section

Mycology

How to Cite

Antunes, A. G. V., Pasqualotto, A. C., Diaz, M. C., d'Azevedo, P. A., & Severo, L. C. (2004). Candidemia in a Brazilian tertiary care hospital: species distribution and antifungal susceptibility patterns . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 46(5), 239-241. https://revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/30836