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[Epidemiology of invasive mycoses: A landscape in continuous change].

The landscape of invasive mycoses is in a continuous evolution with important implications for their diagnosis and treatment. The overall burden remains high, particularly in neonates and the elderly, patients admitted to intensive care units, using prostheses, catheters or other intravenous devices, those receiving different immunosuppressant treatments or antineoplastic chemotherapy, or transplant recipients. In addition, opportunistic mycoses can be associated with HIV infection. Many fungal infections are acquired by inhalation, direct contact or ingestion, but fungi can also enter into the bloodstream through needles or catheters. Invasive candidiasis remains the most frequent mycosis, but its aetiology progressively shifts from Candida albicans to other species of Candida, such as Candida parapsilosis, Candida glabrata, or the multiresistant Candida auris. However, aspergillosis can be predominant in specific conditions, such as bone marrow transplant recipients. Moreover, Pneumocystis, Cryptococcus, Fusarium and Rhizopus can cause devastating illnesses. There are significant variations among hospitals and countries that are related to many factors, such as local characteristics of mycoses and patients, or different practices between medical and surgical wards. The attributed mortality remains high, ranging from 30% in invasive candidiasis to 90-100% in some clinical presentations of scedosporiosis and mucormycosis. The extremely complexity of patients and the growing diversity of pathogenic fungi are major challenges for improving diagnosis, creating surveillance networks, and implementing control measures for these invasive infections.

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