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Detection and Characterization of Two Phenotypes of Candida parapsilosis in South Korea: Clinical Features and Microbiological Findings

We newly detected two (sinking and floating) phenotypes of Candida parapsilosis among bloodstream infection (BSI) isolates from Korean hospitals and assessed their microbiological and clinical characteristics. During the performance of a Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) broth micro...

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Published in:Microbiology spectrum 2023-06, Vol.11 (3), p.e0006623-e0006623
Main Authors: Byun, Jung-Hyun, Won, Eun Jeong, Cho, Hae Weon, Kim, Daewon, Lee, Hyukmin, Kim, Soo Hyun, Choi, Min Ji, Byun, Seung A, Lee, Ga Yeong, Kee, Seung-Jung, Kim, Tae Yeul, Kim, Mi-Na, Choi, Jun Yong, Yong, Dongeun, Shin, Jong Hee
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Language:English
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Summary:We newly detected two (sinking and floating) phenotypes of Candida parapsilosis among bloodstream infection (BSI) isolates from Korean hospitals and assessed their microbiological and clinical characteristics. During the performance of a Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) broth microdilution antifungal susceptibility testing, the sinking phenotype had a characteristic smaller button-like appearance because all yeast cells sank to the bottoms of the CLSI U-shaped round-bottom wells, whereas the floating phenotype comprised dispersed cells. Phenotypic analysis, antifungal susceptibility testing, sequencing, microsatellite genotyping, and clinical analysis were performed on C. parapsilosis isolates from 197 patients with BSI at a university hospital during 2006 to 2018. The sinking phenotype was detected in 86.7% (65/75) of the fluconazole-nonsusceptible (FNS) isolates, 92.9% (65/70) of the isolates harboring the Y132F gene substitution, and 49.7% (98/197) of all isolates. Clonality was more frequently observed for the Y132F-sinking isolates (84.6% [55/65]) than for all other isolates (26.5% [35/132]; 0.0001). Annual incidence of Y132F-sinking isolates increased 4.5-fold after 2014, and two dominant genotypes, persistently recovered for 6 and 10 years, accounted for 69.2% of all Y132F-sinking isolates. Azole breakthrough fungemia (odds ratio [OR], 6.540), admission to the intensive care unit (OR, 5.044), and urinary catheter placement (OR, 6.918) were independent risk factors for BSIs with Y132F-sinking isolates. The Y132F-sinking isolates exhibited fewer pseudohyphae, a higher chitin content, and lower virulence in the Galleria mellonella model than the floating isolates. These long-term results illustrate the increasing BSIs caused by clonal transmission of the Y132F-sinking isolates of C. parapsilosis. We believe that this is the first study describe the microbiological and molecular characteristics of bloodstream isolates of C. parapsilosis in Korea exhibiting two phenotypes (sinking and floating). An important aspect of our findings is that the sinking phenotype was observed predominantly in isolates harboring a Y132F substitution in the gene (92.9%), fluconazole-nonsusceptible (FNS) isolates (86.7%), and clonal BSI isolates (74.4%) of C. parapsilosis. Although the increase in the prevalence of FNS C. parapsilosis isolates has been a major threat in developing countries, in which the vast majority of candidemia cases are treated with fluc
ISSN:2165-0497
2165-0497
DOI:10.1128/spectrum.00066-23