Journal of Fungi (Jun 2021)

Update 2016–2018 of the Nationwide Danish Fungaemia Surveillance Study: Epidemiologic Changes in a 15-Year Perspective

  • Malene Risum,
  • Karen Astvad,
  • Helle Krogh Johansen,
  • Henrik Carl Schønheyder,
  • Flemming Rosenvinge,
  • Jenny Dahl Knudsen,
  • Rasmus Krøger Hare,
  • Raluca Datcu,
  • Bent Løwe Røder,
  • Valeria Stanislavovna Antsupova,
  • Lise Kristensen,
  • Jan Berg Gertsen,
  • Jens Kjølseth Møller,
  • Esad Dzajic,
  • Turid Snekloth Søndergaard,
  • Maiken Cavling Arendrup

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof7060491
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
p. 491

Abstract

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As part of a national surveillance programme initiated in 2004, fungal blood isolates from 2016–2018 underwent species identification and EUCAST susceptibility testing. The epidemiology was described and compared to data from previous years. In 2016–2018, 1454 unique isolates were included. The fungaemia rate was 8.13/100,000 inhabitants compared to 8.64, 9.03, and 8.38 in 2004–2007, 2008–2011, and 2012–2015, respectively. Half of the cases (52.8%) involved patients 60–79 years old and the incidence was highest in males ≥70 years old. Candida albicans accounted for 42.1% of all isolates and Candida glabrata for 32.1%. C. albicans was more frequent in males (p = 0.03) and C. glabrata in females (p = 0.03). During the four periods, the proportion of C. albicans decreased (p C. glabrata increased (p p Candida isolates in 2016–2018. Acquired echinocandin resistance increased during the four periods 0.0%, 0.6%, 1.7% to 1.5% (p FKS resistance-mutations and one echinocandin-resistant C. albicans had an FKS mutation outside the hotspot (P1354P/S) of unknown importance. In C. glabrata specifically, echinocandin resistance was detected in 12/460 (2.6%) in 2016–2018 whereas multidrug-class resistance was rare (1/460 isolates (0.2%)). Since the increase in incidence during 2004–2011, the incidence has stabilised. In contrast, the species distribution has changed gradually over the 15 years, with increased C. glabrata at the expense of C. albicans. The consequent decreased fluconazole susceptibility and the emergence of acquired echinocandin resistance complicates the management of fungaemia and calls for antifungal drug development.

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