Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species

Noster J, Koeppel MB, Desnos-Olivier M, Aigner M, Bader O, Dichtl K, Göttig S, Haas A, Kurzai O, Pranada AB, Stelzer Y, et al. (2022)
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 66(2).

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Noster, JaninaUniBi ; Koeppel, Martin B.; Desnos-Olivier, Marie ; Aigner, Maria; Bader, Oliver ; Dichtl, Karl ; Göttig, Stephan; Haas, Andrea; Kurzai, Oliver ; Pranada, Arthur B.; Stelzer, Yvonne; Walther, Grit
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Abstract / Bemerkung
**ABSTRACT**

Magnusiomyces clavatus and Magnusiomyces capitatus are emerging yeasts with intrinsic resistance to many commonly used antifungal agents. Identification is difficult, and determination of susceptibility patterns with commercial and reference methods is equally challenging. For this reason, few data on invasive infections by Magnusiomyces spp. are available. Our objectives were to determine the epidemiology and susceptibility of Magnusiomyces isolates from bloodstream infections (BSI) isolated in Germany and Austria from 2001 to 2020. In seven institutions, a total of 34 Magnusiomyces BSI were identified. Identification was done by internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequencing and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Antifungal susceptibility was determined by EUCAST broth microdilution and gradient tests. Of the 34 isolates, M. clavatus was more common ( n  = 24) than M. capitatus ( n  = 10). BSI by Magnusiomyces spp. were more common in men (62%) and mostly occurred in patients with hemato-oncological malignancies (79%). The highest in vitro antifungal activity against M. clavatus / M. capitatus was observed for voriconazole (MIC 50 , 0.03/0.125 mg/L), followed by posaconazole (MIC 50 , 0.125/0.25 mg/L). M. clavatus isolates showed overall lower MICs than M. capitatus . With the exception of amphotericin B, low essential agreement between gradient test and microdilution was recorded for all antifungals (0 to 70%). Both species showed distinct morphologic traits on ChromAgar Orientation medium and Columbia blood agar, which can be used for differentiation if no MALDI-TOF MS or molecular identification is available. In conclusion, most BSI were caused by M. clavatus. The lowest MICs were recorded for voriconazole. Gradient tests demonstrated unacceptably low agreement and should preferably not be used for susceptibility testing of Magnusiomyces spp.

Erscheinungsjahr
2022
Zeitschriftentitel
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
Band
66
Ausgabe
2
ISSN
0066-4804
eISSN
1098-6596
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/3014010

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Noster J, Koeppel MB, Desnos-Olivier M, et al. Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. 2022;66(2).
Noster, J., Koeppel, M. B., Desnos-Olivier, M., Aigner, M., Bader, O., Dichtl, K., Göttig, S., et al. (2022). Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 66(2). https://doi.org/10.1128/aac.01834-21
Noster, Janina, Koeppel, Martin B., Desnos-Olivier, Marie, Aigner, Maria, Bader, Oliver, Dichtl, Karl, Göttig, Stephan, et al. 2022. “Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species”. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 66 (2).
Noster, J., Koeppel, M. B., Desnos-Olivier, M., Aigner, M., Bader, O., Dichtl, K., Göttig, S., Haas, A., Kurzai, O., Pranada, A. B., et al. (2022). Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 66.
Noster, J., et al., 2022. Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 66(2).
J. Noster, et al., “Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species”, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, vol. 66, 2022.
Noster, J., Koeppel, M.B., Desnos-Olivier, M., Aigner, M., Bader, O., Dichtl, K., Göttig, S., Haas, A., Kurzai, O., Pranada, A.B., Stelzer, Y., Walther, G., Hamprecht, A.: Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. 66, (2022).
Noster, Janina, Koeppel, Martin B., Desnos-Olivier, Marie, Aigner, Maria, Bader, Oliver, Dichtl, Karl, Göttig, Stephan, Haas, Andrea, Kurzai, Oliver, Pranada, Arthur B., Stelzer, Yvonne, Walther, Grit, and Hamprecht, Axel. “Bloodstream Infections Caused by and : Epidemiological, Clinical, and Microbiological Features of Two Emerging Yeast Species”. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 66.2 (2022).
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2026-02-19T08:06:33Z
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