Colonização por Candida em indivíduos com candidemia / Candida colonization in individuals with candidemia

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2008

RESUMO

In the last two decades, Candida spp. have emerged as important nosocomial pathogens in the world and in Brazil. The identification of the source of infection is important in approaching prevention and control strategies. Strategies for the prevention of endogenous candidiasis may focus, to a certain extent, on methods for reducing mucosal colonization, for example limitation use of wide-spectrum antibiotics. However, in cases in which an exogenous source is involved, the aggressive reinforcement of adequate healthcare practices is mandatory to prevent transmission. The objective of this study was to evaluate different Candida colonization sites as potential sources for Candida fungemia. The study was done in 3 hospitals in Brazil: the Central Institute of Hospital das Clinicas, a 1000-bed tertiary-care hospital affiliated to the University of São Paulo; the Institute Emilio Ribas, a 200-bed infectious diseases hospital, reference for all the state of São Paulo; and the General Hospital of Itapecerica da Serra, a secondary-care community hospital located in area of the greater São Paulo. The patients with a positive blood culture for Candida, collected from a peripheral vein, were included in the study if they had to be hospitalized for 48 hours or more before candidemia. The following surveillance cultures for Candida were collected from: urine, rectum, oropharynx, skin (groin and axilla), skin around the catheter and catheter tip if available. Molecular typing was performed when the same species of Candida (C. albicans, C. parapsilosis, C. tropicalis and C. glabrata) was isolated from the blood and from surveillance sites of a single patient. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis was performed for C. albicans, C. parapsilosis and C. glabrata isolates. Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA was performed for C. albicans and C. tropicalis. A total of 63 consecutive patients with candidemia were included in the period from May 2004 to October 2005. C. albicans comprised 42% of the blood isolates, C. parapsilosis 35%, C. tropicalis 16%, C. guilliermondii, C. krusei, C. glabrata, and C. holmii, 2% each. Six of the 10 isolates from catheter tips presented identical electrophoretic profiles to corresponding C. parapsilosis blood cultures and no other surveillance sites were related. C. albicans isolates from blood and from corresponding gastrointestinal surveillance sites from 12 patients presented identical genotypes. In conclusion, our results suggest that tract gastrointestinal colonization is the probable source of C. albicans candidemia and that C. parapsilosis candidemia is not endogenous.

ASSUNTO(S)

eletroforese em gel de campo pulsado técnica de amplificação ao acaso de dna polimórfico microbiological techniques candida/isolamento &purificação candidiasis/microbiology random amplified polymorphic dna technique candidiasis/epidemiology fatores de risco infecção hospitalar técnicas microbiológicas risk factors candida/isolation &purification candidíase/epidemiologia candidíase/microbiologia electrophoresis gel pulsed-field cross infection

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