Literature DB >> 24039389

Fusarium keratitis in Brazil: genotyping, in vitro susceptibilities, and clinical outcomes.

Rafael A Oechsler1, Tiago M Yamanaka, Paulo Jm Bispo, Juliana Sartori, Maria Cecilia Zorat Yu, Analy Salles A Melo, Darlene Miller, Ana Luisa Hofling-Lima.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this paper is to describe clinical characteristics and determine correlations between clinical outcomes and antifungal susceptibility among molecularly characterized ocular Fusarium isolates in Brazil.
METHODS: Forty-one Fusarium isolates obtained from 41 eyes of 41 patients were retrieved from the ophthalmic microbiology laboratory at São Paulo Federal University and grown in pure culture. These isolates were genotyped and antifungal susceptibilities determined for each isolate using a broth microdilution method. The corresponding medical records were reviewed to determine clinical outcomes.
RESULTS: The 41 isolates were genotypically classified as Fusarium solani species complex (36 isolates, 88%), Fusarium oxysporum species complex (two isolates, 5%), Fusarium dimerum species complex (one isolate, 2%) and two isolates that did not group into any of the species complexes. Final best corrected visual acuity varied from 20/20 to light perception and was on average 20/800 (logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (LogMAR) 1.6). A history of trauma was the most common risk factor, being present in 21 patients (51%). Therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty was necessary in 22 patients (54%). Amphotericin B had the lowest minimum inhibitory concentration for 90% of isolates (MIC90) value (2 μg/mL) and voriconazole had the highest (16 μg/mL). There was an association between a higher natamycin MIC and need for therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty (Mann-Whitney test, P < 0.005).
CONCLUSION: Trauma was the main risk factor, and therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty was necessary in 54% of patients. Amphotericin B had the lowest MIC90 (2 μg/mL) of the three antifungal agents tested. There was an association between higher natamycin MIC levels and corneal perforation, emphasizing the need for antifungal susceptibility testing and tailoring of antifungal strategies.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Fusarium species; antifungal; clinical outcome; genotyping; keratitis

Year:  2013        PMID: 24039389      PMCID: PMC3769409          DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S40063

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1177-5467


Introduction

Brazil, like other countries having an important territorial part in the tropical zone, has a significant number of fungal keratitis cases, ranging from 11% to 56% of all positive cultures.1,2 In countries like India and People’s Republic of China, fungi can be the etiology in up to 36% and 62%, respectively, of all keratitis cases.3,4 Among the fungi causing keratitis, Fusarium species is the most prevalent. Studies show that 45%–67% of fungal keratitis in Brazil is caused by this microorganism.1,2,5–7 Among the Fusarium species that are pathogenic to the eye, Fusarium solani is the most common (found in up to 91% of isolates),7 followed by Fusarium oxysporum and Fusarium dimerum.8,9 Treatment of keratomycosis is still largely empirical, without a consensus on the role of susceptibility testing in choosing the most appropriate therapy. Ocular microbiology laboratories do not routinely perform antifungal susceptibility testing because it is time-consuming, laborious, and challenging, especially for molds. However, in vitro resistance of Fusarium isolates against many of the available antifungal agents has been demonstrated to be common, mainly for F. solani. Studies have already shown that there is a correlation between antibiotic susceptibilities and clinical outcomes in bacterial keratitis.10–12 Some studies are starting to show that a relationship between antifungal susceptibility and clinical outcomes might also exist in cases of fungal keratitis.13–15 Methods for testing antifungal susceptibility have improved significantly. Determination of the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for Fusarium species has been demonstrated to be clinically relevant and provides valuable information for choosing the best topical antifungal therapy. There is a lack of epidemiologic and clinical information on fungal ulcers in Brazil. Also, information on antifungal susceptibilities and correlation with clinical outcomes is limited, and such information will be very useful to improve treatment strategies for Fusarium species, which is the main pathogen in cases of fungal keratitis in Brazil and many other countries. In the present study, 41 isolates from 41 patients presenting with Fusarium keratitis were identified by genotyping, tested for their antifungal susceptibility to natamycin, amphotericin B, and voriconazole, and correlated with clinical outcomes.

Methods and materials

Isolates

Forty-one Fusarium isolates, representing 41 patients, were retrospectively selected from the ocular microbiology laboratory at the Federal University of São Paulo, based on the availability of medical records. We included isolates from 1997 to 2010. The source of all isolates was corneal scrapings from patients with keratitis. The reference strains Candida albicans American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) 90028, Candida parapsilosis ATCC 22019, and Candida krusei ATCC 6258 were included as quality controls for the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute antifungal testing method. Morphologic species-specific identification of all strains was performed in the mycology laboratory at the Federal University of São Paulo.

Medical records review

Following institutional ethics committee approval (Comitê de Ética em Pesquisa da Universidade Federal de São Paulo, registration number 1066/08), the medical records from the 41 affected patients were made available for review. All patients included in the chart review had positive corneal culture results for Fusarium species. The follow-up best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) of patients treated with topical or oral antimicrobial agents was the visual acuity measured when the patient was considered cured (inactive corneal scar with intact epithelium). No patient had additional pathology at baseline to account for decreased visual acuity at any time during management. The final BCVA of patients who underwent therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty was the last BCVA measured prior to surgery. For this group of patients, the time to cure was assigned as an estimate, which was the longest time to cure among clinically treated patients. Snellen visual acuities were converted to the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (LogMAR) for the purpose of data analysis. Vision levels, classified as count fingers, hand motion, and light perception, were assigned Snellen acuities of 1/200, 0.5/200 and 20/20,000. The corresponding LogMAR visual acuities were 2.3, 2.6, and 3.0, respectively, similar to a previously published scale.16

Antifungal susceptibility tests

The methodology as described in the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute document M38-A217 was followed for broth dilution antifungal susceptibility testing of filamentous fungi. Additive drug dilutions were prepared to yield twice the final strength required for the test. Stock solutions of amphotericin B, voriconazole, and natamycin at their final concentrations were frozen at −80°C until needed. The agents evaluated in this study have well established microdilution MIC ranges for the quality control strains used.

Isolates and DNA extraction

Forty-one Fusarium isolates, collected from 41 patients seen in the department of ophthalmology at the Federal University of São Paulo were retrospectively selected from the ocular and molecular microbiology laboratory culture collection, based on availability of medical records. All isolates were recovered from corneal scraping cultures from patients with clinically diagnosed infectious keratitis. Frozen isolates on skim milk were cultured twice on Sabouraud agar. Total fungal DNA was extracted from fresh cultured isolates after boiling for 15 minutes using the PrepMan ultra sample preparation reagent (Applied Biosystems, Bedford, MA, USA).

Amplification and sequencing of internal transcribed spacer region

The internal transcribed spacer region, comprising ITS1, ITS2, and 5.8S rRNA, was amplified in a 25 μL polymerase chain reaction mixture containing 10 μL GoTaq Green polymerase chain reaction (PCR) Master Mix (3.0 mM MgCl, 200 μM deoxynucleoside triphosphate [dNTP], buffer, and 1 U Taq DNA polymerase, Promega, Madison, WI, USA), 0.4 μM of each of the following primers, F18S (5′-GCGGAG-GGATCATTACCGAGTT-3′) and F28S (5′-CAGCGGGT-ATTCCTACCTGATC-3′), 1 μL DNA template, and diethyl dicarbonate water. Amplification was performed using the Master Cycler gradient thermocycler (Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany) with the following conditions: one cycle at 95°C for 3 minutes, followed by 45 cycles with a denaturation step at 95°C for 30 seconds, an annealing step at 55°C for 30 seconds, and an extension step at 68°C for 2 minutes. The amplification was carried out in the presence of negative and positive controls. Amplified products separated on 1% agarose gel were purified using a QIAquick purification kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA). Polymerase chain reaction products were sequenced on both strands using Big Dye Terminator chemistry on the 3000 ABI genetic analyzer (Applied Biosystems). The sequences obtained were edited using SeqMan (DNAStar, Madison, WI, USA) and searched for similarity in GenBank using the BLAST algorithm program with automatically adjusted parameters.

Phylogenetic analysis

Before alignment, sequences were scanned for quality using the Phred base-calling program. The upstream and downstream regions just after the primer annealing regions were manually trimmed (SeqMan, DNAStar). Thirty-nine edited sequences ranging from 502 to 566 base pairs exported as a FASTA file were aligned using the Muscle multiple sequence alignment algorithm implemented by the Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis program version 5.1.18 Assignment of haplotypes was done using DnaSP version 5. For the purposes of comparison in the phylogenetic tree, sequences of the internal transcribed spacer region representing a recent Fusarium species complex classification system were included.8 The internal transcribed spacer sequence from Lecanicillium lecanii was used as an outgroup (DQ007051). Selection of the substitution model that best fits the data as well as estimation of model parameters such as base pair frequencies, substitution rates, transition and transversion ratio, proportion of invariant sites, and gamma shape parameter, were computed using jModel test.19 A Bayesian phylogenetic tree implementing the general time reversible model with a proportion of invariable sites and gamma-distributed rate variation across sites was constructed using MrBayes version 3.1.2.20 Posterior probabilities of the tree were estimated by running two simultaneous and independent Metropolis-coupled Monte Carlo Markov chains with three heated and one cold chain for 5 million generations. Chains were sampled every 100th cycle. The consensus tree was summarized after discarding the first 25% generations as burn-in. The tree was visualized and edited using Mesquite version 2.75.21

Nucleotide sequence accession numbers

The ITS nucleotide sequences reported in this work have been deposited in GenBank under accession numbers JX270136, JX270138 to JX270143, JX270148 to JX270153, JX270157 to JX270173, and JX270175 to JX270183.

Statistical analyses

The statistical analyses were performed using Stata software version 11.0 (College Station, TX, USA). Tests of significance were two-tailed with P ≤ 0.05. Fisher’s exact test was performed for categorical variables. The nonparametric Mann–Whitney test was used to analyze data that did not follow a normal distribution (ie, antifungal MICs).

Results

Identification

Morphologic identification of the organism as belonging to the Fusarium genus took a mean of 5.8 (2–14) days. Identification to the species level after genus classification took 4 further days on average. Morphology-based identification classified the 41 isolates as F. solani (n = 35), F. oxysporum (n = 4), and F. dimerum (n = 2). Based on genotype, the 41 isolates were classified into three groups, ie, F. solani species complex (FSSC, 36 isolates, 88%), F. oxysporum species complex (FOSC, two isolates, 5%), and F. dimerum species complex (FDSC, one isolate, 2%), with two isolates not grouping in any species complex. The relationship between the genotyped isolates is shown in the consensus tree (Figure 1). In the major species complex found, ie, FSSC, 16 distinct haplotypes were identified. Haplotype D was the most frequent among the FSSC (13 of 34 sequences, 38.2%). The posterior probability supporting the whole FSSC clade was 63%. An internal subcluster including haplotypes c, k, p, and q clustered together with a posterior probability support of 91%. The FDSC and FOSC groups, each represented by a single haplotype, were supported by a posterior probability of 98% and 100%, respectively.
Figure 1

Consensus Bayesian phylogenetic tree of the ITS 1 and ITS 2 regions summarized after discarding as burn-in the first 25% generations of the Metropolis-coupled Monte Carlo Markov chain analysis. Numbers in the branches indicate the posterior probabilities estimate. Letter in parentheses corresponds to the haplotype. Only one sequence of each haplotype is represented in the tree. The parenthesis marked (*) represents isolates that did not group into any species complex.

Abbreviations: FSSC, Fusarium solani species complex; FOSC, Fusarium oxysporum species complex; FDSC Fusarium dimerum species complex; ITS, internal transcribed spacer region.

Clinical characteristics and epidemiology

The 41 samples were isolated from 41 eyes of 41 patients. The clinical characteristics of the patients are shown in Tables 1 and 2. The mean follow-up time in this study was 9.3 (1–24) months. Mean time to diagnosis, defined as the interval from symptom onset until a specific diagnosis was made, was 19 ± 12 (3–90) days. Risk factors for infectious keratitis were found in 26 patients. A history of trauma was the most frequent risk factor, being present in 21 patients (51%).
Table 1

Clinical characteristics of keratitis cases

PatientFusarium speciesAge (years)SexRisk factorsTreatment delay (days)Time to cure (days)
1F. solani54M10180
2F. solani17M90102
3F. solani56MTrauma3070
4F. solani52MTrauma2860
5F. solani36MTrauma19270
6F. solani37MTrauma1090
7F. solani46MTrauma48110
8F. solani44MConjunctivitis8150
9F. solani52F18
10F. solani85MTrauma30180
11F. solani41F18240
12F. solani31FTrauma10180
13F. solani20MConjunctivitis1690
14F. solani49MTrauma7150
15F. solani32M1245
16F. solani42MTrauma1060
17F. solani39MTrauma3060
18F. solani59FTrauma40180
19F. solani47MTrauma1560
20F. solani20MTrauma3060
21F. solani53MTrauma112
22F. solani40FConjunctivitis25240
23F. solani33MTrauma
24F. solani60MTrauma26180
25F. solani54MTrauma15180
26F. solani52M4590
27F. solani36MTrauma1560
28F. solani35M1290
29F. solani66MTrauma460
30F. solani48MTrauma3090
31F. solani46M336
32F. solani40M1860
33F. solani47F2030
34F. solani76F20
35F. solani49M2130
36F. solani73M17
37F. oxysporum49M105
38F. oxysporum30MCL730
39F. dimerum28MCL415
40Fusarium species57MSurgery2190
41Fusarium species41MConjunctivitis7240
Totals/means ± standard deviation36 F. solani45 ± 14.734 M20 trauma19 ± 12.4107 ± 71.5
2 F. oxysporum7 F4 conjunctivitis
1 F. dimerum2 CL
2 Fusarium species1 surgery

Abbreviations: M, male; F, female; CL, contact lens wear.

Table 2

Further clinical characteristics of keratitis cases

PatientInitial BCVAFinal BCVAUlcer locationPrior steroidPenetrating keratoplastyTreatment givenMIC N/V/A
12.32.0CNoYesN, K4/8/4
22.31.68/8/1
32.32.0CNoN, K, F0.125/8/0.5
40.80.2CYesA4/8/0.5
52.32.3CNoYesN, A, F4/4/2
60.10.1CYesN, K4/16/1
72.62.3NoYesN, K8/8/4
82.00.5CNoN, K4/8/4
91.00.4A
102.62.6CNoYesK4/4/0.5
113.02.6CYesA, K4/16/2
122.62.0CNoYesN, K, A8/8/2
132.30.4CNoA1/16/1
142.62.6CNoYesA, K4/8/2
150.40.4CNoN, K4/2/4
162.02.0CNoYesN, A, K4/2/2
170.40.5CNoN, K0.03/8/0.5
182.32.6CNoYesA, K4/8/2
190.70.1CNoN, K0.125/8/0.25
200.70.7PNoN, K8/4/4
211.61.64/16/2
223.02.3CNoYesA8/8/4
232.3No4/8/1
242.62.0CNoYesK4/4/1
252.62.3CNoYesA, K0.25/4/0.5
262.32.3CNoYesA8/8/2
270.70.5CYesA, K4/8/1
282.32.0CNoYesA, K8/4/2
290.90.4PYesA, K
302.3CNoYesA, F, K
312.62.3CYesYesA, K8/8/1
322.32.3PYesN, K8/16/0.5
332.02.3CNoA4/8/0.5
342.62.6YesA, K8/2/0.5
352.62.6CYesA, K8/8/1
362.32.3YesYesA4/1/0.5
371.6NoA, K4/2/1
382.32.0PNo4/8/2
390.20CNoN4/4/2
402.30.5CNoYesA, K8/8/4
412.62.6CYesYesA, K4/8/1
Totals/means ± standard deviation1.9 ± 0.881.6 ± 0.9629 C(br/)4 P

Note: BCVAs are expressed in logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (LogMAR).

Abbreviations: BCVA, best corrected visual acuity; C, in the central 6 mm of the cornea; P, peripheral; N, natamycin; A, amphotericin B; K, ketoconazole; F, fluconazole; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentration; n, natamycin; V, voriconazole.

Management

Complete information on the treatment protocol was present in the records of 37 patients. Patients who had a positive culture and/or microscopy for a mold were started on a topical antifungal, ie, natamycin 5% or amphotericin B 0.15% hourly. A systemic antifungal (ketoconazole 200 mg or fluconazole 200 mg twice daily) was added for ulcers larger than 6 mm in diameter or if no improvement with topical antifungal use was seen after 5 days. Topical amphotericin B 0.15% (compounded from Fungizone®, Bristol-Myers Squibb, New York, NY, USA) was used in 24 cases, as monotherapy in seven cases, and in combination with other antimicrobial agents in 15 cases. Topical natamycin 5% (Pimaricina®, Ophthalmos, São Paulo, Brazil) was used in 14 cases and as monotherapy in one case. Oral fluconazole 150 mg (generic fluconazole, Medley Pharmaceuticals, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil) or ketoconazole 200 mg (generic ketoconazole, Medley Pharmaceuticals) twice daily was used in 29 cases. Therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty was necessary in 22 patients (54%), the indication being perforation in 19 cases and severe infiltrates nonresponsive to clinical therapy in three cases. Seven of the therapeutic grafts failed (four due to reinfection, two because of rejection, and one as a result of stromal melting) and repeat penetrating keratoplasty was successful in only one case, which had failed initially because of rejection.

Antifungal susceptibility testing

Antifungal susceptibilities were tested for 38 isolates. Minimum inhibitory concentrations for 90% of the isolates (MIC90), medians, and MIC ranges for the Fusarium isolates are listed in Table 3. Amphotericin B had the lowest MIC values and voriconazole had the highest. Most of the isolates were equally susceptible to natamycin and amphotericin B. There was a strong association between a higher natamycin MIC and need for penetrating keratoplasty (Table 4).
Table 3

MIC90 values for voriconazole, natamycin, and amphotericin B (μg/mL)

Voriconazole (n = 35)Natamycin (n = 35)Amphotericin B (n = 35)
MIC901682
Median841
Range1–160.25–160.03–4

Abbreviation: MIC90, minimum inhibitory concentration for 90% of isolates.

Table 4

Association between mean (SD) MIC values for antifungal agents and need for PK

No need for PKNeed for PKP-value*
Natamycin3.21 (2.68)6.21 (3.27)0.005
Voriconazole8.93 (4.06)7.05 (4.53)0.116
Amphotericin B0.74 (0.63)1.48 (1.81)0.183

Note:

Mann–Whitney test.

Abbreviations: MIC, minimum inhibitory concentration; PK, penetrating keratoplasty; SD, standard deviation.

Discussion

Fungal keratitis is a very prevalent disease in developing countries, and tends to have a poorer outcome when compared with keratitis caused by other pathogenic organisms. Fusarium is the leading pathogen in fungal keratitis in most of the studies worldwide, particularly in tropical regions.3–7 Information on epidemiology, antifungal susceptibilities, and correlation with clinical outcomes is lacking, and such information is useful from a prognostic, diagnostic, and therapeutic viewpoint. In the present study, the main genotypically identified species complex was FSSC (F. solani, in 88% of patients). Another study performed in the same institution 8 years earlier found a similar frequency (91%).7 Morphology-based identification showed that 85% of the isolates belonged to the F. solani species. One isolate that was morphologically classified as F. dimerum, when identified afterwards by genotyping, was shown to be FSSC. Further, two isolates morphologically identified as F. oxysporum were genotypically classified as belonging to the Fusarium genus but did not group in any species complex. Overall, the accuracy of morphologic identification, performed in the present study by a mycology laboratory, was 97.6%. In a previous study by the same author, a discrepancy of up to 50% between morphology-based and genotype-based identification was found when species-specific morphologic identification was performed by a general microbiology laboratory.9 In that study, based on morphologic identification, a shift occurred toward mistakenly identifying F. oxysporum instead of F. solani. Most of the patients affected were male (83%) and in a productive age group (mean 46 years), which agrees with several other studies of fungal keratitis.6,22,23 This is probably due to the fact that males, particularly those of working age, are more involved in outdoor activities, with greater exposure to foreign bodies and trauma. Comparing outcomes between the different species of Fusarium in this study, the only significant difference was a greater need for therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty with F. solani isolates when compared with F. oxysporum and F. dimerum isolates (Fisher’s exact test, P = 0.05). Another study performed by the same authors in South Florida also demonstrated that F. solani isolates were associated with a higher rate of therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty than other Fusarium species.24 It has been demonstrated that F. solani has the capacity to form more biofilm than other species complexes.25 The ability to form biofilm makes an isolate more resistant to antifungal agents than their planktonic counterparts without biofilm. F. solani biofilms have demonstrated reduced susceptibility, mainly for amphotericin B, which could in part explain the worse clinical outcomes for F. solani compared with other Fusarium species. Of note, the majority of studies published on this subject and used for comparison describe outcomes for fungal keratitis in general, and not specifically for keratitis cases involving Fusarium species. The only study found in the literature which shows outcomes specifically for Fusarium keratitis was performed by Alfonso et al.26 In the present study, final visual outcomes were poor, with a mean final BCVA of 1.60 LogMAR (20/800), ranging from 20/25 to light perception. Final BCVA was ≥20/40 in only 11% and ≤20/200 in 64% of the patients. Another study performed in Brazil also showed poor final BCVA of >20/40 in 28% of patients and <20/200 in 63%.5 We identified much better final BCVA results in studies performed in other countries. In a Chinese study of early surgical intervention, final BCVA was ≥20/40 in 47% of patients and ≤20/200 in only 4%.4 Two studies in the US also showed data on visual acuity, ie, 56% of patients in a North Florida study had ≥20/40, and 65% in a South Florida study had ≥20/50 and 18% <20/100.26,27 Therapeutic grafts were necessary in this study for 22 patients (54%). Another study in Brazil had a therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty rate of 38%.5 This is a high incidence when compared with studies carried out in developed countries, which show a need for penetrating keratoplasty in 21%–25% of cases.27–30 On the other hand, in developing countries, there is still a high need for penetrating keratoplasty to treat fungal keratitis cases, being necessary in 40%–47% in India13,31 and performed in 88% of severe cases in a study from People’s Republic of China.4 Mean time to diagnosis, defined as the interval from symptom onset until a specific diagnosis was made, was 19 (3–90) days. This is a long interval, considering that each day of delay decreases the chance of a good visual outcome. As our institution is a reference center, many cases only reach a specific diagnosis and treatment after being treated by one or more general physicians or ophthalmologists. In one study performed in the US, a mean time to diagnosis of 9 days was found.26 Another study from the US found a mean time to presentation of 9 days.27 Another study from People’s Republic of China showed a mean time to presentation of 27 days.4 A study from India found that patients with a time to presentation of more than 10 days had statistically significant higher rate of surgical intervention, mostly due to corneal perforation.31 Trauma was found to be the main risk factor in our study, being documented in 51% of patients. Of these, 62% were from organic sources. Other studies in Brazil and abroad corroborate this finding, and it is well known that trauma and foreign bodies are an important source of fungal ocular infections.4–6,27,30 Steroid use was found to be present in 15% of the patients. In other studies, it varied from 7% to 26%.4,26,27 A low incidence of contact lens wear (5%) has been found among the patients we studied. Studies in developed countries, such as the US, show higher rates of contact lens wear among the risk factors, varying from 40% to 47%, and up to 52% during the contact lens-related outbreak in 2005–2006.26,27,30 A study in People’s Republic of China, mostly involving rural patients, did not identify a history of contact lens wear in any of 654 cases of fungal keratitis.4 This demonstrates a worldwide variation in the prevalence of contact lens-related fungal keratitis, and in Brazil, as in People’s Republic of China and other developing countries, contact lens wear is a less frequent risk factor for fungal keratitis, with trauma still being the most important one. A long time to cure was also found, being 110 days on average. Fungal ulcers typically take a longer time to heal than bacterial ulcers. The long time to diagnosis found in this study may be one of the main factors implicated in increasing the severity of the disease and prolonging the time to cure. This outcome was found to be shorter in studies performed in the US, ranging from 53 to 67 days.26–28 In our study, the results of in vitro susceptibility tests (Tables 2 and 3) demonstrated mostly high MIC levels to available antifungal agents among Fusarium species, particularly when compared with published susceptibility profiles for other fungi, such as Aspergillus and Candida species.32,33 Antifungal sensitivity was not significantly different between species of Fusarium, probably due to the small number of non-F. solani isolates. Amphotericin B was the study drug with the lowest MIC levels against Fusarium isolates (MIC90 2 μg/mL), as seen in other susceptibility studies in the US (2 μg/mL),34,35 Italy (2 μg/mL),36 and People’s Republic of China (2 μg/mL4 and 4 μg/mL37). Natamycin had an MIC90 of 8 μg/mL in our study, which varied by one dilution in other studies (4 μg/mL22,35 for isolates from the US and India, and 8 μg/mL and 16 μg/mL for two other studies in India).14,15 In the present study, voriconazole had a MIC90 of 16 μg/mL. Other studies testing voriconazole for Fusarium species found an MIC90 as low as 4 μg/mL in US,34 8 μg/mL in Italy,36 and 16 μg/mL in People’s Republic of China.37 This shows the high MICs for antifungals needed to treat Fusarium species in general, especially for voriconazole. Other fungi, including Aspergillus and Candida species, are more susceptible than Fusarium species to azoles, particularly voriconazole.32 In the present study, the MIC90 for natamycin was 8 μg/mL and for amphotericin B was 2 μg/mL for the tested isolates. Due to the inherent toxicity of amphotericin B eye drops, the commonly used topical concentration for this drug is 0.15% (1.5 mg/mL), whereas it is 5% (50 mg/mL) for natamycin. In this study, this difference of about 30 times between natamycin and amphotericin B concentrations and a difference of only two dilutions in MIC90 between them suggests that natamycin eyedrops should be used as the first-line antifungal agent for Fusarium keratitis at our institution. Interestingly, an association was found between higher MIC levels for natamycin and need for therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty due to corneal perforation. A recent study from a fungal corneal ulcer trial in India also showed that higher MICs for natamycin and voriconazole were associated with an increased chance of corneal perforation.14 Previous studies have demonstrated that lower MICs are correlated with better outcomes because re-epithelialization occurs earlier in those cases.14,15 Isolates with higher MICs are more difficult to treat and take more time to respond to therapy. Poor penetration of antifungal agents in the corneal stroma is also a limiting factor for rapid clearance of infection.38 Taken together, higher MIC levels and the typically poor tissue penetration of antifungals hamper achievement of pharmacodynamic targets and therapeutic levels of these drugs, contributing to worse clinical outcomes. In Brazil, natamycin and amphotericin B are the mainstay of treatment for fungal corneal ulcers. Therefore, it is reasonable to believe that there may be association between higher natamycin MICs and higher incidence of corneal perforation. These data corroborate the fact that antifungal susceptibility testing may be important to guide treatment of cases with Fusarium keratitis. Because of the inherent limitations in a retrospective study, the clinical data were incomplete in some cases, specifically for risk factors and some follow-up information. Only a small sample size of non-F. solani isolates was available due to the high prevalence of F. solani in Brazil. In future studies, a larger number of isolates from all species may provide more power for interspecies comparisons involving Fusarium.

Conclusion

In the present study, we investigated the epidemiologic data for genotyped isolates from Fusarium keratitis at a reference center in Brazil. Trauma was the main risk factor (51%), and therapeutic penetrating keratoplasties were necessary in 54% of patients. Poor follow-up BCVA (mean 20/800) was demonstrated, along with a long mean time to diagnosis (19 ± 12 days) and mean time to cure (110 ± 72 days). We also performed antifungal susceptibility tests and correlated these with clinical outcomes. Amphotericin B had the lowest MIC90 (2 μg/mL) of the three antifungal agents tested. There was an association between higher natamycin MIC levels and corneal perforation. Our study shows that Fusarium keratitis has a poor outcome, especially in developing countries, and suggests that more resistant strains have a higher risk of perforation, emphasizing the need for antifungal susceptibility testing and the tailoring of antifungal strategies.
  36 in total

1.  Characterization of fusarium keratitis outbreak isolates: contribution of biofilms to antimicrobial resistance and pathogenesis.

Authors:  Pranab K Mukherjee; Jyotsna Chandra; Changping Yu; Yan Sun; Eric Pearlman; Mahmoud A Ghannoum
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2012-07-03       Impact factor: 4.799

2.  Antifungal susceptibility of 44 clinical isolates of Fusarium species determined by using a broth microdilution method.

Authors:  A Reuben; E Anaissie; P E Nelson; R Hashem; C Legrand; D H Ho; G P Bodey
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  1989-09       Impact factor: 5.191

3.  Risk factors and clinical outcomes between fungal and bacterial keratitis: a comparative study.

Authors:  T Y Wong; T P Ng; K S Fong; D T Tan
Journal:  CLAO J       Date:  1997-10

4.  Relationship of in vitro susceptibility to moxifloxacin and in vivo clinical outcome in bacterial keratitis.

Authors:  Prajna Lalitha; Muthiah Srinivasan; P Manikandan; M Jayahar Bharathi; Revathi Rajaraman; Meenakshi Ravindran; Vicky Cevallos; Catherine E Oldenburg; Kathryn J Ray; Christine M Toutain-Kidd; David V Glidden; Michael E Zegans; Stephen D McLeod; Nisha R Acharya; Thomas M Lietman
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2012-03-23       Impact factor: 9.079

5.  [Laboratory study of the mycotic infectious eye diseases and factors associated with keratitis].

Authors:  Ana Luisa Höfling-Lima; Adriana Forseto; João Paulo Duprat; Alfredo Andrade; Luciene Barbosa de Souza; Patrício Godoy; Denise de Freitas
Journal:  Arq Bras Oftalmol       Date:  2005-03-30       Impact factor: 0.872

6.  Organism, minimum inhibitory concentration, and outcome in a fungal corneal ulcer clinical trial.

Authors:  Prajna Lalitha; N Venkatesh Prajna; Catherine E Oldenburg; Muthiah Srinivasan; Tiruvengada Krishnan; Jeena Mascarenhas; C M Vaitilingam; Stephen D McLeod; Michael E Zegans; Travis C Porco; Nisha R Acharya; Thomas M Lietman
Journal:  Cornea       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 2.651

7.  Does in vitro susceptibility predict clinical outcome in bacterial keratitis?

Authors:  Aiyin Chen; Lalitha Prajna; Muthiah Srinivasan; Rajendran Mahalakshmi; John P Whitcher; Stephen McLeod; Thomas M Lietman; Nisha R Acharya
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  2008-01-22       Impact factor: 5.258

8.  Fusarium keratitis: genotyping, in vitro susceptibility and clinical outcomes.

Authors:  Rafael A Oechsler; Michael R Feilmeier; Darlene Miller; Wei Shi; Ana Luisa Hofling-Lima; Eduardo C Alfonso
Journal:  Cornea       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 2.651

9.  Phylogenetic diversity and microsphere array-based genotyping of human pathogenic Fusaria, including isolates from the multistate contact lens-associated U.S. keratitis outbreaks of 2005 and 2006.

Authors:  Kerry O'Donnell; Brice A J Sarver; Mary Brandt; Douglas C Chang; Judith Noble-Wang; Benjamin J Park; Deanna A Sutton; Lynette Benjamin; Mark Lindsley; Arvind Padhye; David M Geiser; Todd J Ward
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2007-05-16       Impact factor: 5.948

Review 10.  In vitro antifungal activities of voriconazole and reference agents as determined by NCCLS methods: review of the literature.

Authors:  A Espinel-Ingroff; K Boyle; D J Sheehan
Journal:  Mycopathologia       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 3.785

View more
  10 in total

1.  Fungal Peritonitis Due to Fusarium solani Species Complex Sequential Isolates Identified with DNA Sequencing in a Kidney Transplant Recipient in Brazil.

Authors:  Walicyranison Plinio da Silva-Rocha; Diana Luzia Zuza-Alves; Analy Salles de Azevedo Melo; Guilherme Maranhão Chaves
Journal:  Mycopathologia       Date:  2015-08-22       Impact factor: 2.574

2.  Fusarium Keratitis in Taiwan: Molecular Identification, Antifungal Susceptibilities, and Clinical Features.

Authors:  Tsung-En Huang; Jie-Hao Ou; Ning Hung; Lung-Kun Yeh; David Hui-Kang Ma; Hsin-Yuan Tan; Hung-Chi Chen; Kuo-Hsuan Hung; Yun-Chen Fan; Pei-Lun Sun; Ching-Hsi Hsiao
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-03

3.  Keratitis by Fusarium temperatum, a novel opportunist.

Authors:  Abdullah M S Al-Hatmi; Alexandro Bonifaz; G Sybren de Hoog; Leticia Vazquez-Maya; Karla Garcia-Carmona; Jacques F Meis; Anne D van Diepeningen
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2014-11-12       Impact factor: 3.090

Review 4.  Fusarium: Molecular Diversity and Intrinsic Drug Resistance.

Authors:  Abdullah M S Al-Hatmi; Jacques F Meis; G Sybren de Hoog
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2016-04-07       Impact factor: 6.823

5.  Global molecular epidemiology and genetic diversity of Fusarium, a significant emerging group of human opportunists from 1958 to 2015.

Authors:  Abdullah Ms Al-Hatmi; Ferry Hagen; Steph Bj Menken; Jacques F Meis; G Sybren de Hoog
Journal:  Emerg Microbes Infect       Date:  2016-12-07       Impact factor: 7.163

Review 6.  Fusarium Keratitis-Review of Current Treatment Possibilities.

Authors:  Marek Szaliński; Aleksandra Zgryźniak; Izabela Rubisz; Małgorzata Gajdzis; Radosław Kaczmarek; Joanna Przeździecka-Dołyk
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-11-23       Impact factor: 4.241

Review 7.  Recent advances in diagnosis and management of Mycotic Keratitis.

Authors:  Prafulla K Maharana; Namrata Sharma; Ritu Nagpal; Vishal Jhanji; Sujata Das; Rasik B Vajpayee
Journal:  Indian J Ophthalmol       Date:  2016-05       Impact factor: 1.848

Review 8.  Reduced Multidrug Susceptibility Profile Is a Common Feature of Opportunistic Fusarium Species: Fusarium Multi-Drug Resistant Pattern.

Authors:  Saad J Taj-Aldeen
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2017-04-10

Review 9.  Rare fungal infectious agents: a lurking enemy.

Authors:  Anna Skiada; Ioannis Pavleas; Maria Drogari-Apiranthitou
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2017-10-31

10.  Fusarium solani keratitis: role of antifungal susceptibility testing and identification to the species level for proper management.

Authors:  Priscila Dallé Rosa; Karla Sheid; Claudete Locatelli; Diane Marinho; Luciano Goldani
Journal:  Braz J Infect Dis       Date:  2019-05-23       Impact factor: 3.257

  10 in total

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