Abstract

Candida albicans is one of the most common human fungal pathogens. Candidemia has significant mortality globally. No epidemiological study of C. albicans based on multilocus sequence typing (MLST) has been conducted in Thailand. Therefore, MLST was used to study the molecular epidemiology of C. albicans blood strains in a large Thai teaching hospital. In vitro virulence phenotypes and antifungal susceptibility testing by broth microdilution were also conducted. Forty-six C. albicans blood strains from 37 patients were collected from the Department of Microbiology, Siriraj Hospital, in 2016 and 2017. Most patients (71.8%) were more than 60 years old, and the case fatality rate was 54.8%. The male-to-female ratio was 5:3. Thirty-four diploid sequence types (DSTs), including six new DSTs, were identified, with DST2514 (8.7%) and DST2876 (8.7%) as the most common DSTs. Strains were clustered into nine clades. Unlike other studies of C. albicans blood strains in Asia, clade 17 was the most common (13 strains, 28.3%). Sequential allelic changes were evident in sequential strains from one patient. All strains produced phospholipase and hemolysin, while none produced proteinase. The ability to form biofilm was found in 82.6% of the strains. Clade 17 strains showed significantly stronger hemolytic activity than non–clade 17 strains (69.2% versus 27.3%; p = 0.022). However, no significant association existed between clades and patient mortalities. All were susceptible or wild type to anidulafungin (MIC range = 0.015–0.12 and GM = 0.030), micafungin (MIC range = ≤ 0.008–0.015 and GM = 0.008), caspofungin (MIC range = 0.008–0.12 and GM = 0.036), and amphotericin B (MIC range = 0.25–0.5 and GM = 0.381). Only one strain was resistant to voriconazole (MIC range = ≤ 0.008 to ≥ 8 and GM = 0.010) and fluconazole (MIC range = 0.12–16 and GM = 0.398). In conclusion, a high prevalence of clade 17 C. albicans blood strains was found in Thailand, in contrast to other Asian countries. This unique finding might be explained by the strong hemolytic activity that is required for bloodstream infection of C. albicans.

Highlights

  • Candida albicans is a member of the human flora and is commonly colonized in the human digestive tract

  • 75% of all women suffer from vulvovaginal candidiasis at one point in their life span, and C. albicans accounts for nearly 90% of such cases (Yazdanparast et al, 2015)

  • C. albicans and other Candida species including C. glabrata, C. parapsilosis, C. tropicalis, and C. krusei can travel through the bloodstream and together are causative agents in 90% of invasive candidiasis cases (Vaezi et al, 2017)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Candida albicans is a member of the human flora and is commonly colonized in the human digestive tract. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) has been widely used to study the molecular characterization of C. albicans based on the sequences of seven housekeeping genes (AAT1a, ACC1, ADP1, MPI1b, SYA1, VPS13, and ZWF1b) (Bougnoux et al, 2003; Afsarian et al, 2015). This method has identified 19 clades worldwide (Shin et al, 2011; Gong et al, 2018). MLST was used to study the molecular epidemiology of C. albicans strains of candidemia patients at Siriraj Hospital, including virulence factors and antifungal susceptibility profiles

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