Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat-13110, Kuwait
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The rapid detection and identification of
Candida
species in clinical laboratories are extremely important for the management of patients with hematogenous candidiasis. The presently available culture and biochemical methods for detection and species identification of
Candida
are time-consuming and lack the required sensitivity and specificity. In this study, we have established a seminested PCR (snPCR) using universal and species-specific primers for detection of
Candida
species in serum specimens. The universal outer primers amplified the 3′ end of 5.8S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and the 5′ end of 28S rDNA, including the internally transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2), generating 350- to 410-bp fragments from the four commonly encountered
Candida
species, viz.,
C. albicans
,
C. tropicalis
,
C. glabrata
, and
C. parapsilosis.
The species-specific primers, complementary to unique sequences within the ITS2 of each test species, amplified species-specific DNA in the reamplification step of the snPCR. The sensitivity of
Candida
detection by snPCR in spiked serum specimens was close to 1 organism/ml. Evaluation of snPCR for specific identification of
Candida
species with 76 clinical
Candida
isolates showed 99% concordant results with the Vitek and/or ID32C yeast identification system. Further evaluation of snPCR for detection of
Candida
species in sera from culture-proven (
n
= 12), suspected (
n
= 16), and superficially colonized (
n
= 10) patients and healthy subjects (
n
= 12) showed that snPCR results were consistently negative with sera from healthy individuals and colonized patients. In culture-proven candidemia patients, the snPCR results were in full agreement with blood culture results with respect to both positivity and species identity. In addition, snPCR detected candidemia due to two
Candida
species in five patients, compared to three by blood culture. In the category of suspected candidemia with negative blood cultures for
Candida
, nine patients (56%) were positive by snPCR; two of them had dual infection with
C. albicans
and either
C. tropicalis
or
C. glabrata
. In conclusion, the snPCR developed in this study is specific and more sensitive than culture for the detection of
Candida
species in serum specimens. Moreover, the improved detection of cases of candidemia caused by more than one
Candida
species is an additional advantage.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
155 articles.
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