Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Drug-resistant fungal infection sickens dozens

Contagious strain of yeast is highly communicab­le, CDC says

- By Lena H. Sun Candida auris, Candida Candida Candida

Nearly three dozen people in the United States have been diagnosed with a deadly and highly drugresist­ant fungal infection since federal health officials first warned U.S. clinicians last June to be on the lookout for the emerging pathogen that has been spreading around the world.

The fungus, a strain of a kind of yeast known as

has been reported in a dozen countries on five continents starting in 2009, where it was first found in an ear infection in a patient in Japan. Since then, the fungus has been reported in Colombia, India, Israel, Kenya, Kuwait, Pakistan, South Korea, Venezuela and the United Kingdom.

Unlike garden variety yeast infections, this one causes serious bloodstrea­m infections, spreads easily from person to person in health care settings, and survives for months on skin and for weeks on bed rails, chairs and other hospital equipment. Some strains are resistant to all three major classes of antifungal drugs.

Based on informatio­n from a limited number of patients, up to 60 percent of people with these infection have died. Many of them also had other serious underlying illnesses.

Those at greatest risk are individual­s who have been in intensive care for a long time or who are on ventilator­s or have central line catheters inserted into a large vein.

In the United States, the largest number of infections has been reported in New York, with at least 28 cases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Infections have also been reported in Illinois, Maryland, Massachuse­tts and New Jersey.

Last June, the CDC sent an alert to clinicians to start looking for the infections, which are difficult to identify with standard laboratory methods.

“As soon as we put out that alert, we started to get informatio­n about cases and now we know more about how it spreads and how it’s acting,” Tom Chiller, the CDC’s top fungal expert, said recently. The CDC now tracks the infections, updating the case count every few weeks.

In addition to the 35 infected patients, an additional 18 were carrying the organism but weren’t sickened by it.

The microbe is among a group of newly emerging drug-resistant threats, health officials said.

“These pathogens are increasing, they’re new, they’re scary and they’re very difficult to combat,” said Anne Schuchat, the CDC’s acting director, during a briefing last week in Washington about growing antimicrob­ial resistance.

Of the first seven cases that were reported to the CDC last fall, four patients had bloodstrea­m infections and died during the weeks to months after the pathogen was identified. Officials said they couldn’t be sure whether the deaths were caused by the infection because all the individual­s had other serious medical conditions. Five patients had the fungus initially isolated from blood, one from urine, and one from the ear.

“It’s really hitting the sickest of the sick,” Chiller said.

The fungus doesn’t seem to be evolving into new strains in the United States. Because the country doesn’t yet have any “homegrown” strains of the deadly fungus, “it gives us a better opportunit­y to contain it and stop it from spreading,” Chiller said.

In other countries, infections have been resistant to all three major types of antifungal drugs, but the U.S. cases have been treatable.

Because invasive bloodstrea­m infections with

are common in hospitaliz­ed patients in the United States, health officials are concerned that this deadly strain could “get into that mix,” Chiller said. Unlike infections in the mouth, throat or vagina (which are typically called yeast infections), invasive yeast infections can affect the blood, heart, brain, eyes, bones and other parts of the body and are more dangerous.

Among infectious disease clinicians and lab personnel, infections involving fungi don’t typically ring the same kind of alarm bells as antibiotic-resistant bacteria — until now.

“This is a paradigm shift, because is not generally thought of as highly resistant or passed person to person,” he said.

Since the CDC issued its alert in June, the agency has provided funds and additional expertise to help regional laboratori­es and hospitals identify the organism.

 ?? SHAWN LOCKHART/CDC ?? A strain of the infection
is cultured in a petri dish at the CDC.
SHAWN LOCKHART/CDC A strain of the infection is cultured in a petri dish at the CDC.

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