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<i>Malassezia restricta:</i>An Underdiagnosed Causative Agent of Blood Culture-Negative Infective Endocarditis

Linda Houhamdi, Yvonne Benito, A. Boibieux, Damien Dupont, François Delahaye, Françoise Thivolet-Béjui, Martine Wallon, François Vandenesch, Coralie Bouchiat

2021Clinical Infectious Diseases19 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Infective endocarditis (IE) is a severe disease requiring microbial identification to successfully adapt its treatment. Currently, identification of its etiological microorganism remains unresolved in 5.2% of cases. We aimed to improve IE diagnosis using an ultra-sensitive molecular technique on cardiac samples in microbiologically nondocumented (culture and conventional polymerase chain reaction [PCR]) IE (NDIE) cases. METHODS: Cardiac samples explanted in a tertiary hospital in Lyon, France, from patients with definite IE over a 5-year period were retrospectively analyzed. NDIE was defined as Duke definite-IE associated with negative explorations including cardiac samples culture, bacterial amplification, and serologies. Ultrasensitive molecular diagnosis was achieved using the Universal Microbe Detection kit (Molzym®). Fungal identification was confirmed using 26S-rDNA and internal transcribed spacer amplifications. Fungal infection was confirmed using Grocott-Gromori staining, auto-immunohistochemistry on cardiac samples, and mannan serologies. RESULTS: Among 88 included patients, microbial DNA was detected in all 16 NDIE cases. Bacterial taxa typical of IE etiologies were detected in 13/16 cases and Malassezia restricta in the 3 other cases. In these 3 cases, histological examination confirmed the presence of fungi pathognomonic of Malassezia that reacted with patient sera in an auto-immunohistochemistry assay and cross-reacted with Candida albicans in an indirect immunofluorescent assay. CONCLUSIONS: M. restricta appears to be an underestimated causative agent of NDIE. Importantly, serological cross-reaction of M. restricta with C. albicans may lead to its misdiagnosis. This is of major concern since M. restricta is intrinsically resistant to echinocandins; the reference treatment for Candida-fungal IE.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineEndocarditisInfective endocarditisBlood cultureDermatologyMicrobiologyAntibioticsSurgeryBiologyNail Diseases and TreatmentsAntifungal resistance and susceptibilityOcular Infections and Treatments
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