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Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad?

Fungal nomenclature changes have been a regular occurrence in recent years, eliciting heated debate on whether such changes will confuse clinicians and harm patients. We conducted surveys of Australasian laboratory staff and clinicians to assess attitudes, practices, and concerns regarding nomenclat...

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Autores principales: Kidd, Sarah E., Halliday, Catriona L., Haremza, Elizabeth, Gardam, Dianne J., Chen, Sharon C. A., Elvy, Juliet A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8826822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35138169
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02377-21
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author Kidd, Sarah E.
Halliday, Catriona L.
Haremza, Elizabeth
Gardam, Dianne J.
Chen, Sharon C. A.
Elvy, Juliet A.
author_facet Kidd, Sarah E.
Halliday, Catriona L.
Haremza, Elizabeth
Gardam, Dianne J.
Chen, Sharon C. A.
Elvy, Juliet A.
author_sort Kidd, Sarah E.
collection PubMed
description Fungal nomenclature changes have been a regular occurrence in recent years, eliciting heated debate on whether such changes will confuse clinicians and harm patients. We conducted surveys of Australasian laboratory staff and clinicians to assess attitudes, practices, and concerns regarding nomenclatural change. The majority of respondents to both surveys were aware of fungal nomenclatural changes (93.5% laboratories, 79.7% clinicians); 72.8% of laboratories had already implemented nomenclature changes, and 68.7% of clinicians recalled receiving at least one laboratory report utilizing updated fungal nomenclature. The vast majority of clinicians (94%) both within and outside of infection specialties supported laboratories reporting updated species names with inclusion of the previous species name. The importance of including the previous name on reports was demonstrated by 73.3% of clinicians viewing “Nakaseomyces glabrata (formerly Candida glabrata)” as clinically significant, versus only 38.2% viewing “Pichia kudriavzeveii” as significant in the absence of its former name. When asked about reporting practices, 73.9% of laboratories would report a Candida krusei isolate as “Pichia kudriavzeveii (formerly Candida krusei),” with the rest reporting as “Candida krusei” (21.7%) or “Pichia kudriavzeveii” (1.1%) without further explanation. Laboratory concerns included clinicians being confused by reports, commonly used identification platforms continuing to use superseded species names, education of staff, and delays in updating species codes in laboratory information systems. Adopting fungal name changes appears to be well supported by laboratories and clinicians in Australia and New Zealand, and can be achieved safely and unambiguously provided the former name is included on reports. IMPORTANCE Recent changes in fungal species names have been contentious, eliciting heated debate on social media. Despite available recommendations on adapting to the changes, concerns include clinicians dismissing pathogens as contaminants with patient harm as a result, and disruption of the literature. Such concerns are understandable, but are not supported by evidence and may represent a vocal minority. This survey of Australasian laboratories and clinicians assesses attitudes and practices relating to changes in fungal nomenclature and found that there is overwhelming support for adopting nomenclature changes.
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spelling pubmed-88268222022-02-17 Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad? Kidd, Sarah E. Halliday, Catriona L. Haremza, Elizabeth Gardam, Dianne J. Chen, Sharon C. A. Elvy, Juliet A. Microbiol Spectr Research Article Fungal nomenclature changes have been a regular occurrence in recent years, eliciting heated debate on whether such changes will confuse clinicians and harm patients. We conducted surveys of Australasian laboratory staff and clinicians to assess attitudes, practices, and concerns regarding nomenclatural change. The majority of respondents to both surveys were aware of fungal nomenclatural changes (93.5% laboratories, 79.7% clinicians); 72.8% of laboratories had already implemented nomenclature changes, and 68.7% of clinicians recalled receiving at least one laboratory report utilizing updated fungal nomenclature. The vast majority of clinicians (94%) both within and outside of infection specialties supported laboratories reporting updated species names with inclusion of the previous species name. The importance of including the previous name on reports was demonstrated by 73.3% of clinicians viewing “Nakaseomyces glabrata (formerly Candida glabrata)” as clinically significant, versus only 38.2% viewing “Pichia kudriavzeveii” as significant in the absence of its former name. When asked about reporting practices, 73.9% of laboratories would report a Candida krusei isolate as “Pichia kudriavzeveii (formerly Candida krusei),” with the rest reporting as “Candida krusei” (21.7%) or “Pichia kudriavzeveii” (1.1%) without further explanation. Laboratory concerns included clinicians being confused by reports, commonly used identification platforms continuing to use superseded species names, education of staff, and delays in updating species codes in laboratory information systems. Adopting fungal name changes appears to be well supported by laboratories and clinicians in Australia and New Zealand, and can be achieved safely and unambiguously provided the former name is included on reports. IMPORTANCE Recent changes in fungal species names have been contentious, eliciting heated debate on social media. Despite available recommendations on adapting to the changes, concerns include clinicians dismissing pathogens as contaminants with patient harm as a result, and disruption of the literature. Such concerns are understandable, but are not supported by evidence and may represent a vocal minority. This survey of Australasian laboratories and clinicians assesses attitudes and practices relating to changes in fungal nomenclature and found that there is overwhelming support for adopting nomenclature changes. American Society for Microbiology 2022-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8826822/ /pubmed/35138169 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02377-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Kidd et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Kidd, Sarah E.
Halliday, Catriona L.
Haremza, Elizabeth
Gardam, Dianne J.
Chen, Sharon C. A.
Elvy, Juliet A.
Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad?
title Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad?
title_full Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad?
title_fullStr Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad?
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad?
title_short Attitudes of Australasian Clinicians and Laboratory Staff to Changing Fungal Nomenclature: Has Mycological Correctness Really Gone Mad?
title_sort attitudes of australasian clinicians and laboratory staff to changing fungal nomenclature: has mycological correctness really gone mad?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8826822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35138169
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02377-21
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