Journal of Fungi (Aug 2023)

Clinical, Epidemiological and Laboratory Features of Invasive <i>Candida parapsilosis</i> Complex Infections in a Brazilian Pediatric Reference Hospital during the COVID-19 Pandemic

  • Paulo Henrique Peixoto,
  • Maria Laína Silva,
  • Fernando Victor Portela,
  • Bruno da Silva,
  • Edlâny Milanez,
  • Denis de Oliveira,
  • Aldaíza Ribeiro,
  • Henrique de Almeida,
  • Reginaldo Lima-Neto,
  • Glaucia Morgana Guedes,
  • Débora Castelo-Branco,
  • Rossana Cordeiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof9080844
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 844

Abstract

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The present study aimed to describe the clinical, epidemiological and laboratory characteristics of invasive candidiasis by C. parapsilosis complex (CPC) in a Brazilian tertiary pediatric hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic. Clinical samples were processed in the BACT/ALERT® 3D system or on agar plates. Definitive identification was achieved by MALDI-TOF MS. Antifungal susceptibility was initially analyzed by the VITEK 2 system (AST-YS08 card) and confirmed by the CLSI protocol. Patient data were collected from the medical records using a structured questionnaire. CPC was recovered from 124 patients over an 18-month period, as follows: C. parapsilosis (83.87%), C. orthopsilosis (13.71%) and C. metapsilosis (2.42%). Antifungal resistance was not detected. The age of the patients with invasive CPC infections ranged from C. parapsilosis. C. orthopsilosis infections were significantly more prevalent in patients from critical care units. Invasive infections caused by different pathogens occurred in 75 patients up to 30 days after the recovery of CPC isolates. Overall, 23 (18.55%) patients died within 30 days of CPC diagnosis. Catheter removal and antifungal therapy were important measures to prevent mortality. COVID-19 coinfection was only detected in one patient.

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