Burden of Serious Fungal Infections in India

Author:

Ray Animesh1ORCID,Aayilliath K Adarsh1ORCID,Banerjee Sayantan2ORCID,Chakrabarti Arunaloke3ORCID,Denning David W45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, AIIMS , New Delhi , India

2. Department of Microbiology, AIIMS , Kalyani, West Bengal , India

3. Department of Medical Microbiology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research , Chandigarh , India

4. Manchester Fungal Infection Group, University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre , Manchester , United Kingdom

5. Global Action For Fungal Infections , Geneva , Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Background Fungal disease is frequent in India, but its incidence and prevalence are unclear. This review aims at defining the frequency or burden of various fungal infections in India. Methods A systematic review of the literature on the PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science (WOS) databases was conducted using appropriate search strings. Deterministic modeling determined annual incidence and prevalence estimates for multiple life- and sight-threatening infections with significant morbidity. Results Literature searches yielded >2900 papers; 434 papers with incidence/prevalence/proportion data were analyzed. An estimated 57 251 328 of the 1 393 400 000 people in India (4.1%) suffer from a serious fungal disease. The prevalence (in millions) of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis is 24.3, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis is 2.0, tinea capitis in school-age children is 25, severe asthma with fungal sensitization is 1.36, chronic pulmonary aspergillosis is 1.74, and chronic fungal rhinosinusitis is 1.52. The annual incidence rates of Pneumocystis pneumonia (58 400), invasive aspergillosis (250 900), mucormycosis (195 000), esophageal candidiasis in HIV (266 600), candidemia (188 000), fungal keratitis (1 017 100), and cryptococcal meningitis (11 500) were also determined. Histoplasmosis, talaromycosis, mycetoma, and chromoblastomycosis were less frequent. Conclusions India's fungal burden is high and underappreciated in clinical practice.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Oncology

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