Population-based surveillance for scedosporiosis in Australia : epidemiology, disease manifestations and emergence of Scedosporium aurantiacum infection

C. H. Heath, M. A. Slavin, T. C. Sorrell, R. Handke, A. Harun, M. Phillips, Q. Nguyen, L. Delhaes, D. Ellis, W. Meyer, S. C. A. Chen, Iain Gosbell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

113 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Australia-wide population-based surveillance for scedosporiosis identified 180 cases, with 118 (65.6%) cases of colonization and 62 (34.4%) cases of infection. Predisposing factors for isolation of Scedosporium spp. included chronic lung disease in 37.8% and malignancy in 21.7% of cases. Predictors of invasive disease (n = 62) included haematological stem cell transplantation (n = 7), leukaemia (n = 16) and diabetes mellitus (n = 8). Of 183 phenotypically- speciated isolates, 75 (41%) were Scedosporium prolificans (risk factors: haematologic cancer (n = 17), neutropaenia (n = 14)) and 108 (59%) had Scedosporium apiospermum/Pseudallescheria boydii phenotype [risk factor: diabetes (n = 15)]. Scedosporium prolificans (p 0.01) and leukaemia (p 0.03) independently predicted death. Epidemiological and antifungal susceptibility profiles of Scedosporium aurantiacum (prevalence ≥15.8%) and S. apiospermum were similar. No patient with S. aurantiacum infection (n = 6) died. This is the first description of clinical features associated with S. aurantiacum.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)689-693
Number of pages5
JournalClinical Microbiology and Infection
Volume15
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009

Keywords

  • Scedosporium aurantiacum
  • epidemiology

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