29 research outputs found

    [Comparative study of two systems for the determination of the sensitivity of yeasts to antifungal agents].

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    International audienceOne hundred yeast strains (including 60 Candida albicans) were tested in two laboratories using two different antifungal susceptibility test kits, ATB Fungus and Mycostandard. Tests were carried out under everyday work conditions. Four antifungal agents were compared: amphotericin B, flucytosine, miconazole, and ketoconazole. Results were discrepant in 19.2% (77/400) of cases. Following retesting of discordant cases with both kits, the agreement rate for strain characterization was 95.5%. Few discrepancies were seen with flucytosine. Conflicting results obtained with amphotericin B were due to poor reproducibility of Mycostandard results, especially for species other than C. albicans. In contrast, reproducibility of the ATB Fungus kit was inadequate for miconazole. The rate of discrepant results was greatest for ketoconazole. Intermediate susceptibility was seen more often with ATB Fungus for C. albicans and with Mycostandard for C. glabrata and C. krusei. The lack of reproducibility under routine working conditions should lead gallery manufacturers to strive to achieve clearer readings

    Prevalence and pathogenicity of binary toxin–positive Clostridium difficile strains that do not produce toxins A and B

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    International audienceClostridium difficile causes antibiotic-associated diarrhoea and pseudomembranous colitis. The main virulence factors of C. difficile are the toxins A (TcdA) and B (TcdB). A third toxin, called binary toxin (CDT), can be detected in 17% to 23% of strains, but its role in human disease has not been clearly defined. We report six independent cases of patients with diarrhoea suspected of having C. difficile infection due to strains from toxinotype XI/PCR ribotype 033 or 033-like, an unusual toxinotype/PCR ribotype positive for CDT but negative for TcdA and TcdB. Four patients were considered truly infected by clinicians and were specifically treated with oral metronidazole. One of the cases was identified during a prevalence study of A(-)B(-)CDT(+) strains. In this study, we screened a French collection of 220 nontoxigenic strains and found only one (0.5%) toxinotype XI/PCR ribotype 033 or 033-like strain. The description of such strains raises the question of the role of binary toxin as a virulence factor and could have implications for laboratory diagnostics that currently rarely include testing for binary toxin
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