SUSCEPTIBILITY OF Candida spp. ISOLATED FROM BLOOD CULTURES AS EVALUATED USING THE M27-A3 AND NEW M27-S4 APPROVED BREAKPOINTS

Authors

  • Edileusa Rosa dos Santos University Hospital of Santa Maria
  • Camila F. Dal Forno University Hospital of Santa Maria
  • Mari Glei Hernandez University Hospital of Santa Maria
  • Thaís Felli Kubiça Federal University of Santa Maria; Health Science Center; Post-Graduate Program in Pharmaceutical Sciences
  • Tarcieli P. Venturini Federal University of Santa Maria; Health Science Center; Post-Graduate Program in Pharmaceutical Sciences
  • Francieli Chassot Federal University of Santa Maria; Health Science Center; Post-Graduate Program in Pharmaceutical Sciences
  • Janio M. Santurio Federal University of Santa Maria; Departament of Microbiology and Parasitology
  • Sydney Hartz Alves Federal University of Santa Maria; Departament of Microbiology and Parasitology

Abstract

The high mortality rates associated with candidemia episodes and the emergence of resistance to antifungal agents necessitate the monitoring of the susceptibility of fungal isolates to antifungal treatments. The new, recently approved, species-specific clinical breakpoints (SS-CBPs)(M27-S4) for evaluating susceptibility require careful interpretation and comparison with the former proposals made using the M27-A3 breakpoints, both from CLSI. This study evaluated the susceptibility of the different species of Candida that were isolated from candidemias based on these two clinical breakpoints. Four hundred and twenty-two isolates were identified and, among them, C. parapsilosis comprised 46.68%, followed by C. albicans (35.78%), C. tropicalis (9.71%), C. glabrata (3.55%), C. lusitaniae (1.65%), C. guilliermondii (1.65%) and C. krusei (0.94%). In accordance with the M27-A3 criteria, 33 (7.81%) non-susceptible isolates were identified, of which 16 (3.79%) were resistant to antifungal agents. According to SS-CBPs, 80 (18.95%) isolates were non-susceptible, and 10 (2.36%) of these were drug resistant. When the total number of non-susceptible isolates was considered, the new SS-CBPs detected 2.4 times the number of isolates that were detected using the M27-A3 interpretative criteria. In conclusion, the detection of an elevated number of non-susceptible species has highlighted the relevance of evaluating susceptibility tests using new, species-specific clinical breakpoints (SS-CBPs), which could impact the profile of non-susceptible Candida spp. to antifungal agents that require continuous susceptibility monitoring.

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Published

2014-12-01

Issue

Section

Mycology

How to Cite

Santos, E. R. dos, Forno, C. F. D., Hernandez, M. G., Kubiça, T. F., Venturini, T. P., Chassot, F., Santurio, J. M., & Alves, S. H. (2014). SUSCEPTIBILITY OF Candida spp. ISOLATED FROM BLOOD CULTURES AS EVALUATED USING THE M27-A3 AND NEW M27-S4 APPROVED BREAKPOINTS. Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 56(6), 477-482. https://revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/87658