Distribution of invasive fungal infections: Molecular ‎epidemiology, etiology, clinical conditions, diagnosis and ‎risk factors: A 3-year experience with 490 patients under ‎intensive care

Yarahmadi, Mohammad and Raissi ‎, Vahid and Borjian Boroujeni, Zeinab and Shamsaei, Sina and Moqarabzadeh, Vahid (2020) Distribution of invasive fungal infections: Molecular ‎epidemiology, etiology, clinical conditions, diagnosis and ‎risk factors: A 3-year experience with 490 patients under ‎intensive care. Microb Pathog.

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Abstract

Recently, the prevalence of invasive fungal infections (IFIs) is rising. The global mortality ‎rate of IFIs is 10-49%. This study aimed to determine the prevalence, the causative agents, ‎and the risk factors associated with the invasive fungal infections in a tertiary health center ‎to provide valid decision-grounds for healthcare professionals to effectively prevent, ‎control, and treat fungal infections. The current study was conducted on 1477 patients ‎suspected to have systemic fungal infections from different units of the hospital. After ‎screening using routine mycological examination, the patients were confirmed with ‎complementary mycological and molecular methods. Patients were included based on the ‎confirmed diagnosis of IFI and excluded based on lack of a microbiologically and ‎histologically proven diagnosis of IFI. Of the 1477 patients recruited in this study, ‎confirmed cases of fungal infection were 490 (169 proven; 321 cases probable). Among ‎the fungi recovered, Candida species had the highest frequency 337 (68.8%) followed by ‎Aspergillus species 108 (22.1%), Zygomycetes species 21 (4.3%), non-Candida yeast 9 ‎‎(1.8%). Others were black fungi 5 (1%), mycetoma agents 5 (1%), Fusarium 4 (0.8%), and ‎Trichoderma (0.2%). Hematologic malignancies and diabetes mellitus were the most ‎common underlying diseases among IFI-confirmed patients. This study observed an ‎increased frequency of invasive candidiasis with non-albicans Candida and other invasive ‎saprophytic fungal infections. The increased rate of invasive candidiasis with non-albicans ‎agents highlights a new perspective in the epidemiology and treatment of invasive fungal ‎infections.‎

Item Type: Article
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Divisions: Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences > School of Medicine
Depositing User: lorestan university
Date Deposited: 16 Dec 2020 13:30
Last Modified: 16 Dec 2020 13:30
URI: http://eprints.lums.ac.ir/id/eprint/2485

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