Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jul 2023)

Clinical and Mycologic Characteristics of Emerging Mucormycosis Agent Rhizopus homothallicus

  • Shivaprakash M. Rudramurthy,
  • Shreya Singh,
  • Rimjhim Kanaujia,
  • Hansraj Chaudhary,
  • Valliappan Muthu,
  • Naresh Panda,
  • Abhishek Pandey,
  • Sheetal Thakur,
  • Harsimran Kaur,
  • Anup Ghosh,
  • Ritesh Agarwal,
  • Arunaloke Chakrabarti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2907.221491
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 7
pp. 1313 – 1322

Abstract

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We retrospectively reviewed consecutive cases of mucormycosis reported from a tertiary-care center in India to determine the clinical and mycologic characteristics of emerging Rhizopus homothallicus fungus. The objectives were ascertaining the proportion of R. homothallicus infection and the 30-day mortality rate in rhino-orbital mucormycosis attributable to R. homothallicus compared with R. arrhizus. R. homothallicus accounted for 43 (6.8%) of the 631 cases of mucormycosis. R. homothallicus infection was independently associated with better survival (odds ratio [OR] 0.08 [95% CI 0.02–0.36]; p = 0.001) than for R. arrhizus infection (4/41 [9.8%] vs. 104/266 [39.1%]) after adjusting for age, intracranial involvement, and surgery. We also performed antifungal-susceptibility testing, which indicated a low range of MICs for R. homothallicus against the commonly used antifungals (amphotericin B [0.03–16], itraconazole [0.03–16], posaconazole [0.03–8], and isavuconazole [0.03–16]). 18S gene sequencing and amplified length polymorphism analysis revealed distinct clustering of R. homothallicus.

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