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Yeast Bloodstream Infections in the COVID-19 Patient: A Multicenter Italian Study (FiCoV Study)

Anna Prigitano, Elisabetta Blasi, Maria Grazia Calabró, C. Cavanna, Maria da Conceição de Mesquita Cornetta, Claudio Farina, Anna Grancini, P Innocenti, Giuliana Lo Cascio, L Rizzi Nicola, Laura Trovato, Massimo Cogliati, Maria Carmela Esposto, Anna Maria Tortorano, Luisa Romanò, on behalf of the FiCoV Study Group

2023Journal of Fungi20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fungemia is a co-infection contributing to the worsening of the critically ill COVID-19 patient. The multicenter Italian observational study FiCoV aims to estimate the frequency of yeast bloodstream infections (BSIs), to describe the factors associated with yeast BSIs in COVID-19 patients hospitalized in 10 hospitals, and to analyze the antifungal susceptibility profiles of the yeasts isolated from blood cultures. The study included all hospitalized adult COVID-19 patients with a yeast BSI; anonymous data was collected from each patient and data about antifungal susceptibility was collected. Yeast BSI occurred in 1.06% of patients, from 0.14% to 3.39% among the 10 participating centers. Patients were mainly admitted to intensive or sub-intensive care units (68.6%), over 60 years of age (73%), with a mean and median time from the hospitalization to fungemia of 29 and 22 days, respectively. Regarding risk factors for fungemia, most patients received corticosteroid therapy during hospitalization (61.8%) and had a comorbidity (25.3% diabetes, 11.5% chronic respiratory disorder, 9.5% cancer, 6% haematological malignancies, 1.4% organ transplantation). Antifungal therapy was administered to 75.6% of patients, mostly echinocandins (64.5%). The fatality rate observed in COVID-19 patients with yeast BSI was significantly higher than that of COVID-19 patients without yeast BSI (45.5% versus 30.5%). Candida parapsilosis (49.8%) and C. albicans (35.2%) were the most fungal species isolated; 72% of C. parapsilosis strains were fluconazole-resistant (range 0–93.2% among the centers). The FiCoV study highlights a high prevalence of Candida BSIs in critically ill COVID-19 patients, especially hospitalized in an intensive care unit, a high fatality rate associated with the fungal co-infection, and the worrying spread of azole-resistant C. parapsilosis.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Bloodstream infection2019-20 coronavirus outbreakMulticenter studyMedicinePneumoniaVirologyYeastMicrobiologyIntensive care medicineBiologyInternal medicineOutbreakInfectious disease (medical specialty)GeneticsRandomized controlled trialDiseaseBacterial Identification and Susceptibility TestingAntibiotic Use and ResistanceAntifungal resistance and susceptibility
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