Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2019)

Epidemiologic Shift in Candidemia Driven by Candida auris, South Africa, 2016–2017

  • Erika van Schalkwyk,
  • Ruth S. Mpembe,
  • Juno Thomas,
  • Liliwe Shuping,
  • Husna Ismail,
  • Warren Lowman,
  • Alan S. Karstaedt,
  • Vindana Chibabhai,
  • Jeannette Wadula,
  • Theunis Avenant,
  • Angeliki Messina,
  • Chetna N. Govind,
  • Krishnee Moodley,
  • Halima Dawood,
  • Praksha Ramjathan,
  • Nelesh P. Govender

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2509.190040
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 9
pp. 1698 – 1707

Abstract

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Candida auris is an invasive healthcare-associated fungal pathogen. Cases of candidemia, defined as illness in patients with Candida cultured from blood, were detected through national laboratory-based surveillance in South Africa during 2016–2017. We identified viable isolates by using mass spectrometry and sequencing. Among 6,669 cases (5,876 with species identification) from 269 hospitals, 794 (14%) were caused by C. auris. The incidence risk for all candidemia at 133 hospitals was 83.8 (95% CI 81.2–86.4) cases/100,000 admissions. Prior systemic antifungal drug therapy was associated with a 40% increased adjusted odds of C. auris fungemia compared with bloodstream infection caused by other Candida species (adjusted odds ratio 1.4 [95% CI 0.8–2.3]). The crude in-hospital case-fatality ratio did not differ between Candida species and was 45% for C. auris candidemia, compared with 43% for non–C. auris candidemia. C. auris has caused a major epidemiologic shift in candidemia in South Africa.

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