Journal Article
Multicenter Study
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Clinical characteristics of Candida tropicalis fungaemia with reduced triazole susceptibility in Taiwan: a multicentre study.

Candida tropicalis is the second most common Candida species causing fungaemia in Taiwan, and decreased susceptibility to fluconazole has been reported. This study analysed the clinical characteristics of adult patients with C. tropicalis fungaemia and the antifungal susceptibilities of isolates at five tertiary hospitals in Taiwan (1 July 2011 to 30 June 2014). A standardised case record form was used retrospectively to collect demographic, clinical and microbiological characteristics, antifungal treatment and outcomes. MICs of non-duplicate isolates were determined using SensititreTM YeastOneTM and were interpreted using cut-off values recommended by the CLSI. A total 248 patients were diagnosed over the study period; 30-day crude mortality was 52.0%. Multivariate analysis showed that high Charlson comorbidity index ≥4 (OR = 2.09, 95% CI 1.22-3.59; P = 0.008), neutropenia (OR = 4.61, 95% CI 1.42-15.00; P = 0.011) and treatment with an azole-based regimen (OR = 0.39, 95% CI 0.17-0.90; P = 0.028) were significantly associated with 30-day mortality. A total of 33.9% of isolates were non-susceptible to fluconazole (MIC50 , 2 mg/L; MIC90 , 16 mg/L; MIC range, 0.25 to >256 mg/L), whilst 56.9% to voriconazole (MIC50 , 0.25 mg/L; MIC90 , 1 mg/L; MIC range, 0.015 to >8 mg/L) according to CLSI clinical breakpoints. There was no significant correlation between overall mortality and MICs of fluconazole or voriconazole. This study showed high mortality in patients with C. tropicalis fungaemia, and azole-based antifungal treatment could improve outcomes regardless of fluconazole MICs of infecting isolates compared with patients without any treatment within 48 h.

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