Journal of Fungi (Aug 2021)

An Outbreak of <i>Trichophyton quinckeanum</i> Zoonotic Infections in the Czech Republic Transmitted from Cats and Dogs

  • Pavlína Lysková,
  • Radim Dobiáš,
  • Adéla Čmoková,
  • Miroslav Kolařík,
  • Petr Hamal,
  • Kateřina Šmatláková,
  • Jan Hušek,
  • Karel Mencl,
  • Nad’a Mallátová,
  • Zora Poláčková,
  • Anežka Krnáčová,
  • Kristýna Palkovičová,
  • Daniela Jablonská,
  • Jitka Macháčová,
  • Zdeněk Drlík,
  • Denisa Bázsóová,
  • Pavla Jaworská,
  • Lucie Svobodová,
  • Vit Hubka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof7090684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 9
p. 684

Abstract

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Trichophyton quinckeanum, a zoophilic dermatophyte mostly known as the causative agent of rodent favus, is relatively rarely reported to cause human infections. Indeed, no infections were detected in Czechia between 2012 and 2015 despite routine verification of species identification by ITS rDNA sequencing. By contrast, 25 human and 11 animal cases of infection were documented from December 2016 to December 2020 and the rates tended to grow every following year. Interestingly, most of the cases were reported in the Olomouc region, suggesting a local outbreak. We bring the evidence that human T. quinckeanum infections are most commonly contracted from infected cats or, less frequently, dogs. Although rodents or contaminated soil and environment could be the source of infection to cats and dogs, the occurrence of infections in multiple animals in the same household suggests direct transmission among animals. Confirmation of the identification by molecular methods is highly recommended due to morphological similarity with T. mentagrophytes/T. interdigitale. Antifungal susceptibility testing of isolates to eight antifungals was performed using EUCAST methodology (E.Def 11.0). Among the tested antifungals, terbinafine, amorolfine, ciclopirox and efinaconazole were most potent in vitro and elevated minimum inhibitory concentrations were obtained for fluconazole and ketoconazole.

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