Emerging Infectious Diseases (May 2020)

Rhizopus microsporus Infections Associated with Surgical Procedures, Argentina, 2006–2014

  • Jolene R. Bowers,
  • Juan Monroy-Nieto,
  • Lalitha Gade,
  • Jason Travis,
  • Nicolás Refojo,
  • Ruben Abrantes,
  • Jorge Santander,
  • Chris French,
  • María Cecilia Dignani,
  • Alejandra Ines Hevia,
  • Chandler C. Roe,
  • Darrin Lemmer,
  • Shawn R. Lockhart,
  • Tom Chiller,
  • Anastasia P. Litvintseva,
  • Liliana Clara,
  • David M. Engelthaler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2605.191045
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 5
pp. 937 – 944

Abstract

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Rhizopus spp. fungi are ubiquitous in the environment and a rare but substantial cause of infection in immunosuppressed persons and surgery patients. During 2005–2017, an abnormally high number of Rhizopus infections in surgery patients, with no apparent epidemiologic links, were reported in Argentina. To determine the likelihood of a common source of the cluster, we performed whole-genome sequencing on samples collected during 2006–2014. Most isolates were separated by >60 single-nucleotide polymorphisms, and we found no evidence for recombination or nonneutral mutation accumulation; these findings do not support common source or patient-to-patient transmission. Assembled genomes of most isolates were ≈25 Mbp, and multiple isolates had substantially larger assembled genomes (43–51 Mbp), indicative of infections with strain types that underwent genome expansion. Whole-genome sequencing has become an essential tool for studying epidemiology of fungal infections. Less discriminatory techniques may miss true relationships, possibly resulting in inappropriate attribution of point source.

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