Endemic genotypes of Candida albicans causing fungemia are frequent in the hospital

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Abstract

Genotyping of Candida albicans strains causing candidemia can uncover the presence of endemic genotypes in the hospital. Using a highly reproducible and discriminatory microsatellite marker panel, we studied the genetic diversity of 217 C. albicans isolates from the blood cultures of 202 patients with candidemia (from January 2007 to December 2011). Each isolate represented 1 candidemia episode. Multiple episodes were defined as the isolation of C. albicans in further blood cultures taken ≥7 days after the last isolation in blood culture. Of the 202 patients, 188 had 1 episode, 13 had 2 episodes, and 1 had 3 episodes. Identical genotypes showed the same alleles for all 6 markers. The genotypes causing both episodes were identical in most patients with 2 episodes (11/13; 84.6%). In contrast, 2 different genotypes were found in the patient with 3 episodes, one causing the first and second episodes and the other causing the third episode (isolated 6 months later). We found marked genetic diversity in 174 different genotypes: 155 were unique, and 19 were endemic and formed 19 clusters (2 to 6 patients per cluster). Up to 25% of the patients were infected by endemic genotypes that infected 2 or more different patients. Some of these endemic genotypes were found in the same unit of the hospital, mainly neonatology, whereas others infected patients in different wards. © 2013, American Society for Microbiology.

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Escribano, P., Rodríguez-Créixems, M., Sánchez-Carrillo, C., Muñoz, P., Bouza, E., & Guinea, J. (2013). Endemic genotypes of Candida albicans causing fungemia are frequent in the hospital. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 51(7), 2118–2123. https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.00516-13

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