Cryptococcus diffluens is a recently re-established species that shares several phenotypic features with Cryptococcus neoformans. We evaluated the application of the Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI, formerly NCCLS) macro- and microbroth dilution methods and the E-test agar diffusion method to determine the in vitro susceptibilities of known strains of C. diffluens against amphotericin B (AMB), flucytosine (5-FC), fluconazole (FLC), itraconazole (ITC) and the novel triazoles, voriconazole (VRC) and posaconazole (PSC). Seven strains were found to be resistant in vitro to AMB (MICs >/=2 microg/ml), five were resistant to 5-FC (MICs of >/=32 microg/ml), four were resistant to FLC (MICs of FLC >/=32 microg/ml) and nine were resistant to ITC (MICs of ITC >1 microg/ml). In contrast, VRC and PSC showed good in vitro activity against C.diffluens strains, even those with elevated MICs to amphotericin B and/or established azoles. Most of the isolates were inhibited by 0.5 microg/ml of both VRC and PSC. A clinical isolate showing phenotypic switching exhibited elevated MICs to both agents, i.e., VRC (>16 microg/ml) and PSC (>8 microg/ml).
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