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Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment

BACKGROUND: Aspergillus colonisation is frequently reported after lung transplantation. The question of whether aspergillus colonisation is related to the hospital environment is crucial to prevention. METHOD: To elucidate this question, a prospective study of aspergillus colonisation after lung tra...

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Autores principales: Bonnal, Christine, Leleu, Christopher, Brugière, Olivier, Chochillon, Christian, Porcher, Raphael, Boelle, Pierre-Yves, Menotti, Jean, Houze, Sandrine, Lucet, Jean-Christophe, Derouin, Francis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4667873/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26629994
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144044
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author Bonnal, Christine
Leleu, Christopher
Brugière, Olivier
Chochillon, Christian
Porcher, Raphael
Boelle, Pierre-Yves
Menotti, Jean
Houze, Sandrine
Lucet, Jean-Christophe
Derouin, Francis
author_facet Bonnal, Christine
Leleu, Christopher
Brugière, Olivier
Chochillon, Christian
Porcher, Raphael
Boelle, Pierre-Yves
Menotti, Jean
Houze, Sandrine
Lucet, Jean-Christophe
Derouin, Francis
author_sort Bonnal, Christine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Aspergillus colonisation is frequently reported after lung transplantation. The question of whether aspergillus colonisation is related to the hospital environment is crucial to prevention. METHOD: To elucidate this question, a prospective study of aspergillus colonisation after lung transplantation, along with a mycological survey of the patient environment, was performed. RESULTS: Forty-four consecutive patients were included from the day of lung transplantation and then examined weekly for aspergillus colonisation until hospital discharge. Environmental fungal contamination of each patient was followed weekly via air and surface sampling. Twelve patients (27%) had transient aspergillus colonisation, occurring 1–13 weeks after lung transplantation, without associated manifestation of aspergillosis. Responsible Aspergillus species were A. fumigatus (6), A. niger (3), A. sydowii (1), A. calidoustus (1) and Aspergillus sp. (1). In the environment, contamination by Penicillium and Aspergillus was predominant. Multivariate analysis showed a significant association between occurrence of aspergillus colonisation and fungal contamination of the patient’s room, either by Aspergillus spp. in the air or by A.fumigatus on the floor. Related clinical and environmental isolates were genotyped in 9 cases of aspergillus colonisation. For A. fumigatus (4 cases), two identical microsatellite profiles were found between clinical and environmental isolates collected on distant dates or locations. For other Aspergillus species, isolates were different in 2 cases; in 3 cases of aspergillus colonisation by A. sydowii, A. niger and A. calidoustus, similarity between clinical and environmental internal transcribed spacer and tubulin sequences was >99%. CONCLUSION: Taken together, these results support the hypothesis of environmental risk of hospital acquisition of aspergillus colonisation in lung transplant recipients.
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spelling pubmed-46678732015-12-10 Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment Bonnal, Christine Leleu, Christopher Brugière, Olivier Chochillon, Christian Porcher, Raphael Boelle, Pierre-Yves Menotti, Jean Houze, Sandrine Lucet, Jean-Christophe Derouin, Francis PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Aspergillus colonisation is frequently reported after lung transplantation. The question of whether aspergillus colonisation is related to the hospital environment is crucial to prevention. METHOD: To elucidate this question, a prospective study of aspergillus colonisation after lung transplantation, along with a mycological survey of the patient environment, was performed. RESULTS: Forty-four consecutive patients were included from the day of lung transplantation and then examined weekly for aspergillus colonisation until hospital discharge. Environmental fungal contamination of each patient was followed weekly via air and surface sampling. Twelve patients (27%) had transient aspergillus colonisation, occurring 1–13 weeks after lung transplantation, without associated manifestation of aspergillosis. Responsible Aspergillus species were A. fumigatus (6), A. niger (3), A. sydowii (1), A. calidoustus (1) and Aspergillus sp. (1). In the environment, contamination by Penicillium and Aspergillus was predominant. Multivariate analysis showed a significant association between occurrence of aspergillus colonisation and fungal contamination of the patient’s room, either by Aspergillus spp. in the air or by A.fumigatus on the floor. Related clinical and environmental isolates were genotyped in 9 cases of aspergillus colonisation. For A. fumigatus (4 cases), two identical microsatellite profiles were found between clinical and environmental isolates collected on distant dates or locations. For other Aspergillus species, isolates were different in 2 cases; in 3 cases of aspergillus colonisation by A. sydowii, A. niger and A. calidoustus, similarity between clinical and environmental internal transcribed spacer and tubulin sequences was >99%. CONCLUSION: Taken together, these results support the hypothesis of environmental risk of hospital acquisition of aspergillus colonisation in lung transplant recipients. Public Library of Science 2015-12-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4667873/ /pubmed/26629994 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144044 Text en © 2015 Bonnal et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bonnal, Christine
Leleu, Christopher
Brugière, Olivier
Chochillon, Christian
Porcher, Raphael
Boelle, Pierre-Yves
Menotti, Jean
Houze, Sandrine
Lucet, Jean-Christophe
Derouin, Francis
Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment
title Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment
title_full Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment
title_fullStr Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment
title_short Relationship between Fungal Colonisation of the Respiratory Tract in Lung Transplant Recipients and Fungal Contamination of the Hospital Environment
title_sort relationship between fungal colonisation of the respiratory tract in lung transplant recipients and fungal contamination of the hospital environment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4667873/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26629994
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144044
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