Affiliation:
1. Departments of Pathology1 and
2. Medicine,2
3. University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa; Universidade Federal de Sao Paulo/EPM Sao Paulo, Brazil3; and
4. University Hospital Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands4
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A surveillance program (SENTRY) of bloodstream infections (BSI) in the United States, Canada, Latin America, and Europe from 1997 through 1999 detected 1,184 episodes of candidemia in 71 medical centers (32 in the United States, 23 in Europe, 9 in Latin America, and 7 in Canada). Overall, 55% of the yeast BSIs were due to
Candida albicans
, followed by
Candida glabrata
and
Candida parapsilosis
(15%),
Candida tropicalis
(9%), and miscellaneous
Candida
spp. (6%). In the United States, 45% of candidemias were due to non-
C. albicans
species.
C. glabrata
(21%) was the most common non-
C. albicans
species in the United States, and the proportion of non-
C. albicans
BSIs was highest in Latin America (55%).
C. albicans
accounted for 60% of BSI in Canada and 58% in Europe.
C. parapsilosis
was the most common non-
C. albicans
species in Latin America (25%), Canada (16%), and Europe (17%). Isolates of
C. albicans, C. parapsilosis
, and
C. tropicalis
were all highly susceptible to fluconazole (97 to 100% at ≤8 μg/ml). Likewise, 97 to 100% of these species were inhibited by ≤1 μg/ml of ravuconazole (concentration at which 50% were inhibited [MIC
50
], 0.007 to 0.03 μg/ml) or voriconazole (MIC
50
, 0.007 to 0.06 μg/ml). Both ravuconazole and voriconazole were significantly more active than fluconazole against
C. glabrata
(MIC
90
s of 0.5 to 1.0 μg/ml versus 16 to 32 μg/ml, respectively). A trend of increased susceptibility of
C. glabrata
to fluconazole was noted over the three-year period. The percentage of
C. glabrata
isolates susceptible to fluconazole increased from 48% in 1997 to 84% in 1999, and MIC
50
s decreased from 16 to 4 μg/ml. A similar trend was documented in both the Americas (57 to 84% susceptible) and Europe (22 to 80% susceptible). Some geographic differences in susceptibility to triazole were observed with Canadian isolates generally more susceptible than isolates from the United States and Europe. These observations suggest susceptibility patterns and trends among yeast isolates from BSI and raise additional questions that can be answered only by continued surveillance and clinical investigations of the type reported here (SENTRY Program).
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
450 articles.
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