Journal of Fungi (Aug 2021)

Epidemiology of Candidemia in Kuwait: A Nationwide, Population-Based Study

  • Khaled Alobaid,
  • Suhail Ahmad,
  • Mohammad Asadzadeh,
  • Eiman Mokaddas,
  • Noura Al-Sweih,
  • Khalifa Albenwan,
  • Wadha Alfouzan,
  • Inaam Al-Obaid,
  • Ahlam Jeragh,
  • Ebtihal Al-Roomi,
  • Ziauddin Khan,
  • Leena Joseph,
  • Soumya Varghese

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof7080673
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 8
p. 673

Abstract

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The Candida species cause a majority of invasive fungal infections. In this article, we describe the nationwide epidemiology of candidemia in Kuwait in 2018. Yeast bloodstream isolates submitted from all major hospitals and identified by phenotypic MALDI-TOF MS and/or by molecular methods were studied. Susceptibility testing was performed by Etest. Out of 313 bloodstream yeasts, 239 Candida spp. isolates (excluding duplicate isolates) were obtained during 234 candidemic episodes among 223 patients. Mixed-species candidemia and re-infection occurred in 5 and 11 patients, respectively. C. albicans (n = 74), C. parapsilosis (n = 54), C. tropicalis (n = 35), C. auris (n = 33), C. glabrata (n = 32), other Candida spp. (n = 11), and other yeasts (n = 9) caused fungemia. Nearly 50% of patients were in intensive care units. Candida spp. isolates (except C. glabrata) were susceptible to caspofungin and 27% of C. auris were amphotericin B-resistant. Resistance to fluconazole was 100% in C. auris, 17% in C. parapsilosis, 12% in C. glabrata, and 1% in C. albicans. Mortality was 47% for other Candida/yeast infections. Nationwide candidemia incidence in 2018 was 5.29 cases/100,000 inhabitants. Changes in species spectrum, increasing fluconazole resistance in C. parapsilosis, and the emergence of C. auris as a major pathogen in Kuwait are noteworthy findings. The data could be of help in informing decisions regarding planning, in the allocation of resources, and in antimicrobial stewardship.

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