Abstract

In South Africa, Cryptococcus neoformans is the most common cause of adult meningitis. We performed multi locus sequence typing and fluconazole susceptibility testing of clinical C. neoformans isolates collected from 251 South African patients with cryptococcosis through national surveillance from 2005 to 2009. We examined the association between clinical characteristics of patients and genotype, and the effect of genotype on in-hospital mortality. We performed whole genome phylogenetic analysis of fifteen C. neoformans isolates with the molecular type VNB and tested their virulence in a Galleria mellonella model. Most isolates had the molecular type VNI (206/251, 82%), followed by VNII (25/251, 10%), VNB (15/251, 6%), and VNIV (5/251, 2%); 67 sequence types were identified. There were no differences in fluconazole minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) values among molecular types and the majority of strains had low MIC values (MIC50 of 1 µg/mL and MIC90 of 4 µg/mL). Males were almost twice as likely of being infected with a non-VNI genotype (adjusted odds ratio [OR]: 1.65, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.25–10.99; p = 0.61). Compared to patients infected with a VNI genotype, those with a non-VNI genotype had a 50% reduced adjusted odds of dying in hospital (95% CI: 0.03–7.57; p = 0.62). However, for both these analyses, our estimates had wide confidence intervals spanning 1 with large p-values. Fifteen VNB strains were not as virulent in a G. mellonella larval model as the H99 reference strain. A majority of these VNB strains belonged to the VNBII clade and were very closely related by phylogenetic analysis.

Highlights

  • Cryptococcus is a more common cause of meningitis among adults in South Africa than bacteria or Mycobacterium tuberculosis, accounting for 62% of microbiologically-confirmed cases [1]

  • We aimed to describe the molecular type distribution and fluconazole susceptibility of clinical South African C. neoformans isolates collected through national laboratory-based surveillance during 2005–2009

  • Most of the 251 South African clinical C. neoformans strains in our study had the VNI molecular type, followed by VNII, VNB, and VNIV

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Summary

Introduction

Cryptococcus is a more common cause of meningitis among adults in South Africa than bacteria or Mycobacterium tuberculosis, accounting for 62% of microbiologically-confirmed cases [1]. Two species-complexes within the genus Cryptococcus cause most human disease: Cryptococcus neoformans and Cryptococcus gattii [2]. Both are known to cause disease in HIV-infected persons and immunocompetent individuals [2]. Multi locus sequence typing (MLST) is a good discriminatory tool to genotype strains of the two closely-related sibling Cryptococcus species and is the gold standard for identifying the major molecular types of C. neoformans and C. gattii [5].

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