| Literature DB >> 33114609 |
John A Rossow1,2, Flavio Queiroz-Telles3, Diego H Caceres1,4, Karlyn D Beer1, Brendan R Jackson1, Jose Guillermo Pereira5, Isabella Dib Ferreira Gremião6, Sandro Antonio Pereira6.
Abstract
Cat-transmitted sporotrichosis caused by Sporothrix brasiliensis has become a major public health concern and presents a distinct divergence from the traditional epidemiology of sporotrichosis. This emerging fungal pathogen spreads readily among cat populations, and human infections occur exclusively via zoonotic transmission. While sporotrichosis is an implantation mycosis that typically manifests as cutaneous lesions in humans and cats, severe extracutaneous manifestations are more common with S. brasiliensis than other Sporothrix species infections. Rapid diagnosis and appropriate treatment regimens are critical for successful clinical resolution of sporotrichosis in both cats and humans. Species-level identification of Sporothrix is possible with molecular diagnostics and necessary for tracking the geographic expansion of S. brasiliensis and better understanding its epidemiology. Combatting cat-transmitted sporotrichosis requires a One Health approach to successfully implement public health control measures.Entities:
Keywords: One Health; Sporothrix brasiliensis; cat-transmitted sporotrichosis; fungi; sporotrichosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 33114609 PMCID: PMC7712324 DOI: 10.3390/jof6040247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Clinical presentations of cat-transmitted sporotrichosis in humans. (A) Fixed cutaneous presentation: isolated healing ulcers at the site of trauma. (B) Ophthalmic manifestation: granulomatous conjunctivitis. (C) Lymphocutaneous presentation: a large ulcerated lesion at the site of trauma with evidence of lymphatic nodules and erythema along the regional lymphatic vessel. Photo credit to Dr. Flavio Queiroz-Telles.
Figure 2Clinical presentations of feline sporotrichosis. (A) Swelling of the nasal region with crusted skin ulcers on the nasal bridge and nasal planum, draining serosanguinous exudate. Serosanguinous nasal discharge. (B) Ulcerated skin lesions and crusts on the cephalic region. Epiphora. (C) Multiple skin lesions on the cephalic region. Ascending nodular lymphangitis on the left forelimb and tumor-like lesion on the upright paw. (D) Paronychia on the forelimb. Photo credit to the Laboratory of Clinical Research on Dermatozoonoses in Domestic Animals (Lapclin-Dermzoo), Evandro Chagas National Institute of Infectious Diseases (INI), Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz). Use of these images was authorized by Lapclin-Dermzoo/INI/Fiocruz.
Laboratory approaches for the diagnosis and treatment of sporotrichosis.
| Technique | Specimen Type | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Culture | Affected tissue, body fluids, or blood |
5–8 days to grow in various fungal media (e.g., Sabouraud dextrose agar, Mycosel agar, Brain Heart Infusion agar) 28 °C: Filamentous form with septate hyphae, oval conidia (resembles a flower) 37 °C: Yeast form with 2–6 μm cigar-shaped yeast cells |
| Microscopy | Cytological preparation or lesion biopsy |
Direct test (10–40% KOH): 2–6 µm yeasts, rarely seen (1–2% of cases) PAS and GMS: oval or cigar-shaped organism 10% formaldehyde (1 drop) and physiologic saline (1 drop): observation of asteroid bodies In cats: Romanowsky-type stains (e.g., Quick Panoptic, Diff-Quick or Wright) or Gram staining |
| Immuno-diagnosis | Serum |
Commercially available latex agglutination test system for antibody detection, sensitivity varies with clinical form (data from humans): 100% for disseminated sporotrichosis 86% for osteoarticular sporotrichosis 73% for pulmonary sporotrichosis 56% for cutaneous sporotrichosis Other assays remain experimental |
| DNA Detection | Affected tissue, fresh or formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue, body fluids, or |
Most DNA detection assays target the calmodulin gene DNA sequences represent the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer |
| MALDI-TOF MS |
Able to distinguish to the species level ( | |
| Antifungal Susceptibility Testing |
Mold CLSI reference method (M38), does not discriminate by A multicenter study proposed the following epidemiological cutoff values for minimal inhibitory concentration/minimal effective concentration: |
Sporothrix brasiliensis.
| Database | Strategy | Run Date | Records |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medline | (sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR s brasiliensis OR rose thorn disease * OR rose gardener disease OR rose gardeners disease * OR rose handler disease * OR rose handlers disease * OR esporotricos *).mp. OR exp Sporothrix/ OR exp Sporotrichosis/ | 4/18/19 | 179 articles |
| Embase | ( | 4/18/19 | 270 articles − 164 duplicates = 106 articles |
| CAB Abstracts | (sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR s brasiliensis OR rose thorn disease * OR rose gardener disease OR rose gardeners disease * OR rose handler disease * OR rose handlers disease * OR esporotricos *).mp. OR exp Sporothrix/ OR exp sporotrichosis/ | 4/18/19 | 209 articles − 141 duplicates = 68 articles |
| Global Health | (sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR s brasiliensis OR rose thorn disease * OR rose gardener disease OR rose gardeners disease * OR rose handler disease * OR rose handlers disease * OR esporotricos *).mp. OR exp Sporothrix/ OR exp sporotrichosis/ | 4/18/19 | 148 articles − 148 duplicates = 0 articles |
| Cochrane Library | # 1(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *):ti,ab,kwLimits 17 | 4/18/19 | 0 articles − 0 duplicates = 0 articles |
| Scopus | TITLE-ABS-KEY (sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY(brasiliensis OR brasilienses) AND (LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2019) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2018) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2017) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2016 ) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2015) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2014) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2013) OR LIMIT-TO PUBYEAR, 2012) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2011) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2010) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2009) OR LIMIT-TO (PUBYEAR, 2008)) AND (LIMIT-TO (LANGUAGE, “English”) OR LIMIT-TO ( LANGUAGE, “Spanish”) OR LIMIT-TO (LANGUAGE, “Portuguese”)) | 4/18/19 | 317 articles − 268 duplicates = 49 articles |
| Academic Search Complete | TI,AB(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *) OR DE “SPOROTRICHOSIS” OR DE “SPOROTRICHUM” | 4/18/19 | 120 articles − 110 duplicates = 10 articles |
| CINAHL | TI,AB (sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *) OR (MH “Sporotrichosis”) | 4/18/19 | 9 articles − 9 duplicates = 0 articles |
| GreenFILE | TI,AB(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR”rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *) | 4/18/19 | 3 articles − 3 duplicates = 0 articles |
| Agricultural & Environmental Science Collection | TI,AB(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos*) OR | 4/19/19 | 203 articles − 160 duplicates = 43 articles |
| ProQuest Central | TI,AB(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *) OR MESH.EXACT(“Sporotrichosis”) OR MESH.EXACT(“Sporothrix”) | 4/19/19 | 165 articles − 130 duplicates = 35 articles |
| Virtual Health Library | (tw:(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *)) AND (tw:(brasiliensis OR brasilienses)) | 4/19/19 | 237 articles − 208 duplicates = 28 articles |
| CDC Stacks | Title,Subject,Description(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos*) | 4/19/19 | 0 articles |
| Homeland Security Digital Library | Title,Subject,Description(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos*) | 4/19/19 | 0 articles |
| PubMedCentral | TI,AB(sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *) OR “sporothrix” [MeSH Terms] OR “sporotrichosis” [MeSH Terms] | 4/19/19 | 65 articles − 40 duplicates = 25 articles |
| InFocus Conference and Inform II Conference | (sporothrix * OR sporothrices OR sporotrichum * OR sporotrichos * OR “s brasiliensis” OR “rose thorn disease” OR “rose gardener disease” OR “rose gardeners disease” OR “rose handler disease” OR “rose handlers disease” OR esporotricos *) | 4/19/19 | 3 articles − 0 duplicates = 3 articles |
|
|
| ||
Notes: Duplicates were identified using EndNote automated “find duplicates” function with preference set to match on title, author, and year.
Doses of itraconazole monotherapy or combination therapy with potassium iodide recommended in cases of feline sporotrichosis.
| Drug | Dose | Indications for Use |
|---|---|---|
| ITZ monotherapy (capsule) | Cats ≥ 3 kg: 100 mg/cat/day | -Cats with fixed cutaneous lesions and naïve to antifungal therapy |
| ITZ plus KI (capsules) | ITZ: same doses described above | -Cats presenting multiple skin lesions, mucosal lesions, or presence of respiratory signs |
ITZ: Itraconazole; KI: Potassium iodide.