The Denver Post

Deadly fungus spread rapidly during pandemic

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A deadly fungus that is considered an urgent public health threat by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spread at an “alarming rate” during the pandemic, the CDC said on Monday.

The fungus, called Candida auris, preys primarily on older people with weakened immune systems and is particular­ly dangerous because it resists treatment by common antifungal medication­s. C. auris was first reported in the United States in 2016, showing up most notably in New York and Illinois, where public health officials hoped they could contain it by rigorous screening and infection control in long-term care facilities and nursing homes.

But over the course of 2021, state and local health department­s around the country reported 1,474 clinical cases, about a 200% increase from the nearly 500 cases in 2019.

The surge represents a “dramatic increase” in caseload and transmissi­on of C. auris, according to a research paper published Monday in the Annals of Medicine and compiled by researcher­s at the CDC. The fungus is now in half the 50 states, many with just a handful of cases, but with higher concentrat­ions in California, Nevada, Texas and Florida.

The new paper did not include caseloads from 2022. However, a CDC website that tracks the spread of the fungus shows that there were 2,377 infections reported last year, another sharp increase.

Nearly half of patients who contract C. auris die within 90 days, according to the CDC. But Dr. Meghan Lyman, a medical officer in the mycotic diseases branch of the CDC, said that the agency did not have a good sense of how many deaths to attribute directly to the fungus. The reason is that people who become infected are also dealing with multiple other health challenges, so C. auris can be both a cause of death or something that, along with other poor-health factors, hastens it.

It is likely that the coronaviru­s pandemic worsened the spread of C. auris, CDC officials said. With attention focused on COVID-19, less emphasis was put on screening for C. auris. Also, the fungus tends to cling to nursing gowns, gloves and other personal protective gear that, under ideal conditions, would be changed frequently but that were reused during the pandemic because of supply shortages. C. auris can also attach to ventilator­s or other medical equipment.

Lyman also said that the news is not all bad. Intensive efforts to stop the spread of the germ in New York and Illinois appear to have been effective in containing C. auris within the health care systems in those states — even as the bug rooted elsewhere. “It’s not a hopeless situation,” Lyman said.

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