| Literature DB >> 32040709 |
Nida Ashraf1, Ryan C Kubat1, Victoria Poplin2, Antoine A Adenis3, David W Denning4, Laura Wright5, Orion McCotter6, Ilan S Schwartz7, Brendan R Jackson6, Tom Chiller6, Nathan C Bahr8.
Abstract
Endemic mycoses such as histoplasmosis, coccidioidomycosis, blastomycosis, paracoccidioidomycosis, and talaromycosis are well-known causes of focal and systemic disease within specific geographic areas of known endemicity. However, over the past few decades, there have been increasingly frequent reports of infections due to endemic fungi in areas previously thought to be "non-endemic." There are numerous potential reasons for this shift such as increased use of immune suppressive medications, improved diagnostic tests, increased disease recognition, and global factors such as migration, increased travel, and climate change. Regardless of the causes, it has become evident that our previous understanding of endemic regions for these fungal diseases needs to evolve. The epidemiology of the newly described Emergomyces is incomplete; our understanding of it continues to evolve. This review will focus on the evidence underlying the established areas of endemicity for these mycoses as well as new data and reports from medical literature that support the re-thinking these geographic boundaries. Updating the endemic fungi maps would inform clinical practice and global surveillance of these diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Blastomycosis; Coccidioidomycosis; Emergomyces; Endemic fungi; Histoplasmosis; Paracoccidioidomycosis; Talaromycosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32040709 PMCID: PMC7416457 DOI: 10.1007/s11046-020-00431-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycopathologia ISSN: 0301-486X Impact factor: 2.574
Fig. 1World map estimating regions most likely to have histoplasmosis based on literature review
Selected areas of Histoplasma endemicity outside the North America based on the histoplasmin skin reactivity
| Country, year, region | Number tested (population) | Histoplasmin skin test positivity (%), (location if multiple in study) |
|---|---|---|
| Africa | ||
| Mali, 1969 [ | 1253 (school children) | 6.0 |
| Nigeria, 2018 [ | 735 (HIV-infected patients) | 0 (Lagos), 3 (Yola), 2 (Ilorin), 6 (Calabar), 3 (Ibadan), 15 (Benin) |
| Nigeria, Anambra State, 1996 [ | 40 (cave guides, traders, farmers near a cave), 620 (traders, farmers, palm oil workers) | 35.0 8.8 |
| Nigeria, 1991 [ | 1087 (healthy subjects), 226 (pulmonary hospital patients) | 1.7-5.0 ( 8.9 ( |
| Somalia, Mogadishu and Jilib, 1979 [ | 1014 (NA) | 0.3 |
| Uganda, 1970 [ | 1114 (residents) | 3.9 |
| Asia | ||
| Bangladesh, 1971 [ | 2572 (pulmonary disease patients) | 17.9 |
| China, 2001 [ | 735 (hospitalized patients and healthy residents) | 8.9 (Hunan), 15.1 (Jiangsu), 2.1 (Xinjiang) |
| China, Sichuan Province, 1996 [ | 271 (healthy students and workers) 28 (hospitalized TB patients) | 21.8 28.6 |
| India, 1955 [ | 962 (NA) | 1.9 |
| India, Delhi, 1962 [ | 8062 (NA) | 6.8 |
| India, Kolkata (Calcutta), 1956 [ | 4855 (NA) | 0.7 |
| Indonesia, 1956 [ | 2542 (students, hospital patients, nurses) | 2.7 (children), 9–12 (adults), Jakarta |
| Indonesia, 1956 [ | 281 in Surabaya, 340 in Kedisan (school children/villagers) | 32 (Surabaya), 63.6 (Kedisan) |
| Indonesia, Medan, 1997 [ | 1265 medical students | 13.6 |
| Malaysia, Sarawak, 1963 [ | 181 school children/hospitalized patients | 0.5 |
| Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, 1964 [ | 224 adults | 10.5 |
| Malaysia, Sabah, 1971 [ | 3824 (residents) | 11.8 |
| Myanmar, 1952 [ | 3558 (prisoners) | 14.5-27.1 (Lower and Rangoon), 4.0–8.4 (Upper) 86.4 (Maguee) |
| Philippines, Luzon Island, 2001, 1964 [ | 143 (electric company employees) | 25.9 |
| Philippines, Manilla, 1964 [ | 2577 (naval recruits) | 6.4 |
| Thailand, 1966-1968, [ | NA (NA) | 3–9 (central), 7–14 (northern), 15–36 (southeast and southern) |
| Thailand, Bangkok, 1967 [ | 497 (medical/nursing students) | 5.6 |
| Thailand, 1968 [ | 4211 (prisoners) | 14 (northern), 9 (central), 36 (southern) |
| Vietnam, 1956, Saigon [ | 303 school children/villagers | 33.7 |
| Caribbean | ||
| Barbados, 1981 [ | 103 (NA) | 4 |
| Trinidad, 1981 [ | 86 (NA) | 42 |
| Central and South America | ||
| Argentina, San Martin City, 1996 [ | 315 (children) | 9.2 |
| Belize, 1978 [ | 141 (NA) | 40 |
| Brazil, Amazon, 1994 [ | NA (Tupi-Monde Amerindian populations) | 78.7 (Surui), 5.8 (Gaviao), 80.5 (Zoro) |
| Brazil, Recife, 1966 [ | 1006 (hospital patients) | 20.5 |
| Brazil, Belem, 1966 [ | 258 (hospital patients and medical students) | 43.4 |
| Brazil, Minas Gerais State, 1996 [ | 417 (miners) | 17.5 |
| Colombia, 1968[ | NA (NA) | 21.0 |
| Guatemala, 1960 [ | 821 (hospital patients) | 23–81 |
| Mexico, Guerrero State, 1997 [ | 139 (cave guides, guano collectors, fishermen) | 87.3 (Jutlahuaca), 76.9 (Olinala), 3.8 (Coyuca) |
| Venezuela, Bolivar State, 2004 [ | 157 (residents, farmers) | 42.7 |
| Europe | ||
| Italy, Po Valley, 1994 [ | 776 (students) | 1.2 |
Hcc—Histoplasma capsulatum var. capsulatum; Hcd—Histoplasma capsulatum var. duboisii; NA—information not available
States in which selected endemic mycoses are notifiable as of February 2019
| States | Histoplasmosis | Coccidioidomycosis | Blastomycosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | ✓ | ||
| Arizona | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Arkansas | ✓ | ||
| California | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Delaware | ✓ | ||
| District of Columbia | ✓ | ||
| Illinois | ✓ | ||
| Indiana | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Kansas | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Kentucky | ✓ | ||
| Louisiana | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Maryland | ✓ | ||
| Michigan | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Minnesota | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Missouri | ✓ | ||
| Montana | ✓ | ||
| Nebraska | ✓ | ||
| Nevada | ✓ | ||
| New Hampshire | ✓ | ||
| New Mexico | ✓ | ||
| North Dakota | ✓ | ||
| Ohio | ✓ | ||
| Oregon | ✓ | ||
| Pennsylvania | ✓ | ||
| Rhode Island | ✓ | ||
| South Dakota | ✓ | ||
| Utah | ✓ | ||
| Washington | ✓ | ||
| Wisconsin | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Wyoming | ✓ |
Content source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases (NCEZID), Division of Foodborne, Waterborne, and Environmental Diseases (DFWED)
Fig. 2World map estimating regions with coccidioidomycosis based on literature review
Fig. 3World map estimating regions most likely to have blastomycosis* based on literature review
Areas of endemicity for Paracoccidioides species
| Region/Species | Basis of endemicity |
|---|---|
| South America | |
Sao Paulo [ Espírito Santo [ Rio de Janeiro [ Minas Gerais [ Rondônia [ Mato Grosso [ Bahia [ Mato Grosso do Sul [ Paraná [ Rio Grande do Sul [ Corrientes [ Formosa [ San Felix city, Bolivar [ | Multiple reports ranging from 1–1219 cases during 1960–2012 Two studies reporting 83–444 cases during 1978–2012 Multiple reports during 1978–2012 ranging from 3–36 cases Multiple reports during 1978–2009 ranging from 50–252 cases Two reports during 1988–2012, 3 and 2163 cases Two reported cases (1988–1996); confirmation based on serology or histopathology Two reports during 1978–2012 of 1 and 30 cases One human case and 280 cases in cattle. Multiple reports ranging from 1–102 human cases Two reports of 61-123 human cases during 1966-2009 Endemicity based on positive skin tests in 52/455 humans in one study One case series of 22 human cases Endemicity based on positive skin test in 28/275 humans |
| North America | |
Gulf of Mexico [ Pacific littoral [ | 51 human cases reported during 1972–2012 18 human cases reported during 1972–2012 |
| South America | Two human cases; confirmation based on phylogenetic analysis |
| South America | |
Amazonas [ Para (284) Acre [ Rondonia [ Federal Territory of Roraima [ Maranhao [ Rio de Janeiro [ Minas Gerais [ Bolivia [ | NA NA NA NA NA Twenty-nine reported human cases during 2004–2010 Outbreak with report of eight human cases 2015–2016 One human case report, confirmed on histopathology One human case report; article is in Japanese, and information regarding diagnosis is not available. |
NA information not available
Areas of Talaromyces marneffei endemicity
| Region | Basis of endemicity |
|---|---|
| Republic of China | |
Guangxi [ Other provinces [ | Multiple reports ranging from 8–109 human cases Multiple reports ranging from 1–668 human cases, 1984-2017 |
| Taiwan [ | Multiple reports ranging from 1–35 cases |
| Hong Kong [ | Multiple reports ranging from 1–47 cases |
| Thailand | |
Chiang Mai [ Chiang Ray [ Khon Kaen [ NR [ | Multiple reports in HIV-infected patients ranging from 80–1843 cases during 1990–2004 One case report in an Italian man based on microbiologic confirmation 10.6% of fungal isolates collected from patients with invasive fungal infections during 2006–2011 were One case report in a traveler in Greenland and Denmark from Thailand based on microbiologic confirmation |
| Vietnam | |
Ho Chi Minh City [ Tay Ninh [ Dong Nai [ Kon Tum [ | Multiple reports ranging from 1–719 cases One case report based on microbiologic confirmation One case report based on microbiologic confirmation One case report based on microbiologic confirmation |
| India | |
| Manipur [ | Multiple reports ranging from 1–46 cases |
| Laos [ | Two reported cases based on microbiologic confirmation |
| Myanmar [ | One case report based on microbiologic confirmation |
NR not reported
Emergomyces species by report locations
| Species | Case report locations |
|---|---|
| South Africa | |
| Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, France, India, China, South Africa, and Uganda | |
| Canada, USA | |
| China | |
| Germany |