Azole-Resistance in Aspergillus terreus and related Species: an emerging problem or a rare phenomenon?
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
Objectives: Invasive mold infections associated with Aspergillus species are a significant
cause of mortality in immunocompromised patients. The most frequently occurring
aetiological pathogens are members of the Aspergillus section Fumigati followed by
members of the section Terrei. The frequency of Aspergillus terreus and related (cryptic)
species in clinical specimens, as well as the percentage of azole-resistant strains remains
to be studied.
Methods: A global set (n = 498) of A. terreus and phenotypically related isolates
was molecularly identified (beta-tubulin), tested for antifungal susceptibility against
posaconazole, voriconazole, and itraconazole, and resistant phenotypes were correlated
with point mutations in the cyp51A gene.
Results: The majority of isolates was identified as A. terreus (86.8%), followed by
A. citrinoterreus (8.4%), A. hortai (2.6%), A. alabamensis (1.6%), A. neoafricanus (0.2%),
and A. floccosus (0.2%). One isolate failed to match a known Aspergillus sp., but
was found most closely related to A. alabamensis. According to EUCAST clinical
breakpoints azole resistance was detected in 5.4% of all tested isolates, 6.2% of
A. terreus sensu stricto (s.s.) were posaconazole-resistant. Posaconazole resistance
differed geographically and ranged from 0% in the Czech Republic, Greece, and Turkey
to 13.7% in Germany. In contrast, azole resistance among cryptic species was rare 2 out
of 66 isolates and was observed only in one A. citrinoterreus and one A. alabamensis
isolate. The most affected amino acid position of the Cyp51A gene correlating with the
posaconazole resistant phenotype was M217, which was found in the variation M217T
and M217V.
Conclusions: Aspergillus terreus was most prevalent, followed by A. citrinoterreus.
Posaconazole was the most potent drug against A. terreus, but 5.4% of A. terreus
sensu stricto showed resistance against this azole. In Austria, Germany, and the
United Kingdom posaconazole-resistance in all A. terreus isolates was higher than 10%,
resistance against voriconazole was rare and absent for itraconazole.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Cryptic species, Aspergillus section Terrei, susceptibility profiles, azoles, Cyp51A alterations
Elenco autori:
T.Zoran, B.Sartori, L. Sappl, M.Aigner, F. Sánchez-Reus, A.Rezusta, A.Chowdhary, S.J. Taj-Aldeen, M.C. Arendrup, S.Oliveri, D.P. Kontoyiannis, A.Alastruey-Izquierdo, K. Lagrou,G. Lo Cascio, J.F. Meis, W.Buzina, C. Farina,M. Drogari-Apiranthitou, A.Grancini, A. M. Tortorano, B. Willinger,A.Hamprecht, E. Johnson, L.Klingspor, V. Arsic-Arsenijevic,O.A. Cornely, J. Meletiadis, W. Prammer, V. Tullio,
J. Vehreschild, L.Trovato, R. E. Lewis, E. Segal,P.M. Rath, P.Hamal, M.Rodriguez-Iglesias, E.Roilides,
S.Arikan-Akdagli, A.Chakrabarti, A. L. Colombo,M. S. Fernández, M. T. Martin-Gomez, H. Badali,
G. Petrikkos, N. Klimko, S. M. Heimann, O. Uzun,M. Roudbary, S.de la Fuente, J. Houbraken, B. Risslegger,C. Lass-Flörl, M. Lackner
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