Epidemiology of candidemia in Swiss tertiary care hospitals: secular trends, 1991-2000
- PMID: 14727199
- DOI: 10.1086/380637
Epidemiology of candidemia in Swiss tertiary care hospitals: secular trends, 1991-2000
Abstract
Candida species are among the most common bloodstream pathogens in the United States, where the emergence of azole-resistant Candida glabrata and Candida krusei are major concerns. Recent comprehensive longitudinal data from Europe are lacking. We conducted a nationwide survey of candidemia during 1991-2000 in 17 university and university-affiliated hospitals representing 79% of all tertiary care hospital beds in Switzerland. The number of transplantations and bloodstream infections increased significantly (P<.001). A total of 1137 episodes of candidemia were observed: Candida species ranked seventh among etiologic agents (2.9% of all bloodstream isolates). The incidence of candidemia was stable over a 10-year period. C. albicans remained the predominant Candida species recovered (66%), followed by C. glabrata (15%). Candida tropicalis emerged (9%), the incidence of Candida parapsilosis decreased (1%), and recovery of C. krusei remained rare (2%). Fluconazole consumption increased significantly (P<.001). Despite increasing high-risk activities, the incidence of candidemia remained unchanged, and no shift to resistant species occurred.
Comment in
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Can we describe the epidemiology of candidemia without using selective blood culture bottles for fungus detection?Clin Infect Dis. 2004 Aug 15;39(4):598-9; author reply 599. doi: 10.1086/422150. Clin Infect Dis. 2004. PMID: 15356831 No abstract available.
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