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2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study

BACKGROUND: The development of new anti-infectives has increased rapidly over the past ten years. The need to support these important, life-saving products has increased as well. The STAR program was developed in 2018 to provide a repository of recent clinical fungal isolates with known susceptibili...

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Autores principales: Ghannoum, Mahmoud, Lisa, Long, Sheriff, Rania, Badal, Erika, Lass-Flörl, Cornelia, Hawser, Stephen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6808993/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1784
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author Ghannoum, Mahmoud
Lisa, Long
Sheriff, Rania
Badal, Erika
Lass-Flörl, Cornelia
Hawser, Stephen
author_facet Ghannoum, Mahmoud
Lisa, Long
Sheriff, Rania
Badal, Erika
Lass-Flörl, Cornelia
Hawser, Stephen
author_sort Ghannoum, Mahmoud
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The development of new anti-infectives has increased rapidly over the past ten years. The need to support these important, life-saving products has increased as well. The STAR program was developed in 2018 to provide a repository of recent clinical fungal isolates with known susceptibility profiles and to monitor resistance trends over time. STAR reports the susceptibility patterns of the earliest STAR data concerning echinocandins, second-generation triazoles, and fluconazole against clinical Candida albicans and non-albicans strains including C. auris from worldwide sources. METHODS: Clinical isolates of Candida spp. (n = 203, from 2017–2018) from culture KOL investigator sites in the United States, Asia and the EU, were tested. Of these, 203 were isolated from blood or body tissues, and the remaining 11 from miscellaneous sources. Species distribution included mainly C. albicans, C. glabrata, C. krusei, C. lusitaniae, C. parapsilosis, C. tropicalis, and the emerging pathogen C. auris. Antifungals tested were amphotericin B (AMB), anidulafungin (ANID), fluconazole (FLU), isavuconazole (ISA), posaconazole (POS), and voriconazole (VOR). All testing was performed according to CLSI M27-A4 methodology. RESULTS: Overall, MIC(50), MIC(90), MIC range and percent susceptibility for each drug are listed in Table 1. Our data showed that for ANID, ISA and POS ≥ 93% of isolates were susceptible. While 84 and 88% were susceptible to FLU and VOR, respectively. Moreover, only 78% of isolates were susceptible to AMB. Interestingly, our data show that C. auris isolates were resistant to at least 1 antifungal with 15% of the C. auris strains (n = 40) showing multidrug resistance. CONCLUSION: Ongoing antifungal resistance surveillance like STAR is of utmost importance in order to monitor the efficacy of traditional empirical therapy and for the development of novel antifungal agents. This repository and ongoing STAR study will provide a resource to better support the biopharmaceutical industry’s goals to develop new and more potent antifungal agents. STAR will continue to monitor yeasts and will also include more unusual fungi including Mucor, Rhizopus amongst others. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.
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spelling pubmed-68089932019-10-28 2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study Ghannoum, Mahmoud Lisa, Long Sheriff, Rania Badal, Erika Lass-Flörl, Cornelia Hawser, Stephen Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: The development of new anti-infectives has increased rapidly over the past ten years. The need to support these important, life-saving products has increased as well. The STAR program was developed in 2018 to provide a repository of recent clinical fungal isolates with known susceptibility profiles and to monitor resistance trends over time. STAR reports the susceptibility patterns of the earliest STAR data concerning echinocandins, second-generation triazoles, and fluconazole against clinical Candida albicans and non-albicans strains including C. auris from worldwide sources. METHODS: Clinical isolates of Candida spp. (n = 203, from 2017–2018) from culture KOL investigator sites in the United States, Asia and the EU, were tested. Of these, 203 were isolated from blood or body tissues, and the remaining 11 from miscellaneous sources. Species distribution included mainly C. albicans, C. glabrata, C. krusei, C. lusitaniae, C. parapsilosis, C. tropicalis, and the emerging pathogen C. auris. Antifungals tested were amphotericin B (AMB), anidulafungin (ANID), fluconazole (FLU), isavuconazole (ISA), posaconazole (POS), and voriconazole (VOR). All testing was performed according to CLSI M27-A4 methodology. RESULTS: Overall, MIC(50), MIC(90), MIC range and percent susceptibility for each drug are listed in Table 1. Our data showed that for ANID, ISA and POS ≥ 93% of isolates were susceptible. While 84 and 88% were susceptible to FLU and VOR, respectively. Moreover, only 78% of isolates were susceptible to AMB. Interestingly, our data show that C. auris isolates were resistant to at least 1 antifungal with 15% of the C. auris strains (n = 40) showing multidrug resistance. CONCLUSION: Ongoing antifungal resistance surveillance like STAR is of utmost importance in order to monitor the efficacy of traditional empirical therapy and for the development of novel antifungal agents. This repository and ongoing STAR study will provide a resource to better support the biopharmaceutical industry’s goals to develop new and more potent antifungal agents. STAR will continue to monitor yeasts and will also include more unusual fungi including Mucor, Rhizopus amongst others. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6808993/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1784 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Ghannoum, Mahmoud
Lisa, Long
Sheriff, Rania
Badal, Erika
Lass-Flörl, Cornelia
Hawser, Stephen
2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study
title 2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study
title_full 2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study
title_fullStr 2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study
title_full_unstemmed 2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study
title_short 2104. Susceptibility Trends in Antifungal Resistance (STAR) Study: Preliminary Data from A New Prospective Antifungal Surveillance Study
title_sort 2104. susceptibility trends in antifungal resistance (star) study: preliminary data from a new prospective antifungal surveillance study
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6808993/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1784
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