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Fusarium infections: Epidemiological aspects over 10 years in a university hospital in France

Benoît Thomas, Nelly Contet Audonneau, Marie Machouart, Anne Debourgogne

2020Journal of Infection and Public Health29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Fusarium is an environmental mold that causes deep or superficial mycosis in immunocompromised or immunocompetent patients respectively. METHODS: This epidemiological study evaluated the frequency of Fusarium infections in our university hospital center in France over a decade from 2007 to 2016 and its representativeness in the main clinical infections. RESULTS: A total of 715 Fusarium sp. were isolated from various sampling sites. Fusarium was detected in 0.47% of blood cultures, 31.1% of ophthalmic samples, and 8.48% of nail samples. The frequency of Fusarium infections was stable over this decade. CONCLUSIONS: The main Fusarium species complexes recorded in this study were Fusarium oxysporum species complex and Fusarium solani species complex, indicating the importance of Fusarium as a fungal agent that should be considered in clinical practice. A focus on invasive fusarioses shows that they all occur in hematology patients.

Topics & Concepts

FusariumFusarium solaniFusarium oxysporumEpidemiologyVeterinary medicineFusariosisBiologyMedicineMicrobiologyInternal medicineHorticultureOcular Infections and TreatmentsAntifungal resistance and susceptibilityNail Diseases and Treatments
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