Molecular analysis of cutaneous yeast isolates in the mycobiota of children with atopic dermatitis.
Iwyna França Souza Gomes VialMorgana Ferreira VoidaleskiRosângela Ferreira LameiraFlavia de Fatima CostaDanielle Arake ZanattaVania Aparecida VicenteVania Oliveira de CarvalhoPublished in: Medical mycology (2024)
The skin of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) has a greater diversity of mycobiota. An observational, prospective, cross-sectional, analytical, and comparative study was conducted involving 80 patients with AD (ADG) and 50 individuals without AD (wADG) in a tertiary hospital in Brazil. Skin scale samples were collected from the frontal, cervical, fossae cubital, and popliteal regions and identified using molecular biology techniques. The results showed that 47.5% of ADG had identified yeasts compared to 0% of wADG (p < 0.001). The yeasts Rhodotorula mucilaginosa and Candida parapsilosis were the most abundant. The probability of colonization increased with age, showing values of 40% at 60 months and 80% at 220 months (p = 0.09). The cervical region (12.5%) was colonized to the greatest extent. Our findings revealed that positive mycology was not more probable when the SCORAD or EASI value increased (p = 0.23 and 0.53, respectively). The results showed that the sex, age, and different population types directly affected the composition of the mycobiota in the population analyzed. A higher frequency of colonization and greater diversity of yeast species were detected in the cutaneous mycobiota of children with AD.