| Literature DB >> 26922471 |
Laura Theill1, Catiana Dudiuk1, Susana Morano2, Soledad Gamarra1, María Elena Nardin2, Emilce Méndez2, Guillermo Garcia-Effron3.
Abstract
Candida africana taxonomical status is controversial. It was proposed as a separate species within the Candida albicans species complex; however, phylogenetic analyses suggested that it is an unusual variety of C. albicans. The prevalence of C. albicans-related species (Candida dubliniensis and C. africana) as vulvovaginal pathogens is not known in Argentina. Moreover, data on antifungal susceptibility of isolates causing vulvovaginal candidiasis is scarce. The aims of this study were to establish the prevalence of C. dubliniensis and C. africana in vaginal samples and to evaluate the antifungal susceptibilities of vaginal C. albicans species complex strains. We used a molecular-based method coupled with a new pooled DNA extraction methodology to differentiate C. dubliniensis and C. africana in a collection of 287 strains originally identified as C. albicans isolated from an Argentinian hospital during 2013. Antifungal susceptibilities to fluconazole, clotrimazole, itraconazole, voriconazole, nystatin, amphotericin B and terbinafine were evaluated by using the CLSI M27-A3 and M27-S4 documents. Of the 287 isolates, 4 C. dubliniensis and one C. africana strains (1.39% and 0.35% prevalence, respectively) were identified. This is the first description of C. africana in Argentina and its identification was confirmed by sequencing the ITS2 region and the hwp1 gene. C. dubliniensis and C. africana strains showed very low MIC values for all the tested antifungals. Fluconazole-reduced-susceptibility and azole cross-resistance were observed in 3.55% and 1.41% of the C. albicans isolates, respectively. These results demonstrate that antifungal resistance is still a rare phenomenon in this kind of isolates.Entities:
Keywords: Antifungal resistance; Argentina; Candida Africana; Candida africana; Candidiasis vulvovaginal; Identificación molecular; Molecular identification; Resistencia a los antifúngicos; Vulvovaginal candidiasis
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26922471 DOI: 10.1016/j.ram.2015.10.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Argent Microbiol ISSN: 0325-7541 Impact factor: 1.852