Yeast Bloodstream Infections in the COVID-19 Patient: A Multicenter Italian Study (FiCoV Study).
Anna PrigitanoElisabetta BlasiMaria CalabròCaterina CavannaMaria CornettaClaudio FarinaAnna GranciniPatrizia InnocentiGiuliana Lo CascioLucia NicolaLaura TrovatoMassimo CogliatiMaria Carmela EspostoAnna Maria TortoranoLuisa Romanònull On Behalf Of The FiCoV Study GroupPublished in: Journal of fungi (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
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.
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- end stage renal disease
- intensive care unit
- candida albicans
- ejection fraction
- coronavirus disease
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- type diabetes
- healthcare
- prognostic factors
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cardiovascular disease
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- metabolic syndrome
- machine learning
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- cell wall
- insulin resistance
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- cross sectional
- papillary thyroid
- double blind
- smoking cessation
- chemotherapy induced