Affiliation:
1. Departments of Pathology
2. Epidemiology, Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine and College of Public Health, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
3. Medicine
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The ARTEMIS Global Antifungal Susceptibility Program (ARTEMIS Program) was initiated in 2001 to provide focused surveillance of the activities of fluconazole and voriconazole against
Candida
spp. isolated from blood and other normally sterile sites. A total of 1,586 episodes of infection were detected at 61 international study sites. Overall, 57.7% of the infections were due to
Candida albicans
, followed by
C. glabrata
(14.8%),
C. parapsilosis
(12.5%),
C. tropicalis
(9.4%),
C. krusei
(2.7%), and
C. lusitaniae
(1.5%). Isolates of
C. albicans
,
C. parapsilosis
, and
C. tropicalis
were all highly susceptible to fluconazole (for 99% of the isolates the MICs were ≤8 μg/ml). Likewise, 99 to 100% of these species were inhibited by ≤1 μg of voriconazole per ml. Voriconazole was also active against
C. glabrata
(93% of the isolates were susceptible [MICs ≤ 1 μg/ml]) and
C. krusei
(100% of the isolates were susceptible). The agar-based Etest and disk diffusion methods performed well for the testing of both fluconazole and voriconazole compared to the broth microdilution MIC reference method. These observations establish the continued importance of
C. albicans
as a pathogen and the sustained activity of fluconazole and the broad spectrum of activity of voriconazole and will serve as the first-year benchmark for the ARTEMIS Program. Continued surveillance and refinement of broth- and agar-based test methods will help to identify susceptibility trends and improve the laboratory capability for antifungal susceptibility testing.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
147 articles.
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