4 research outputs found
Increasing Incidence and Shifting Epidemiology of Candidemia in Greece: Results from the First Nationwide 10-Year Survey
Globally, candidemia displays geographical variety in terms of
epidemiology and incidence. In that respect, a nationwide Greek study
was conducted, reporting the epidemiology of Candida bloodstream
infections and susceptibility of isolates to antifungal agents providing
evidence for empirical treatment. All microbiologically confirmed
candidemia cases in patients hospitalized in 28 Greek centres during the
period 2009-2018 were recorded. The study evaluated the incidence of
infection/100,000 inhabitants, species distribution, and antifungal
susceptibilities of isolated strains. Overall, 6057 candidemic episodes
occurred during the study period, with 3% of them being mixed
candidemias. The average annual incidence was 5.56/100,000 inhabitants,
with significant increase over the years (p = 0.0002). C. parapsilosis
species complex (SC) was the predominant causative agent (41%),
followed by C. albicans (37%), C. glabrata SC (10%), C. tropicalis
(7%), C. krusei (1%), and other rare Candida spp. (4%). C. albicans
rates decreased from 2009 to 2018 (48% to 31%) in parallel with a
doubling incidence of C. parapsilosis SC rates (28% to 49%, p <
0.0001). Resistance to amphotericin B and flucytosine was not observed.
Resistance to fluconazole was detected in 20% of C. parapsilosis SC
isolates, with a 4% of them being pan-azole-resistant. A considerable
rising rate of resistance to this agent was observed over the study
period (p < 0.0001). Echinocandin resistance was found in 3% of C.
glabrata SC isolates, with 70% of them being
pan-echinocandin-resistant. Resistance rate to this agent was stable
over the study period. This is the first multicentre nationwide study
demonstrating an increasing incidence of candidemia in Greece with a
species shift toward C. parapsilosis SC. Although the overall antifungal
resistance rates remain relatively low, fluconazole-resistant C.
parapsilosis SC raises concern
High prevalence of antibodies to core+1 /ARF protein in HCV-infected patients with advanced cirrhosis
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) possesses a second open reading frame (ORF)
within the core gene encoding an additional protein, known as the
alternative reading frame protein (ARFP), F or core+1. The biological
significance of the core+1/ARF protein remains elusive. However, several
independent studies have shown the presence of core+1/ARFP antibodies in
chronically HCV-infected patients. Furthermore, a higher prevalence of
core+1/ARFP antibodies was detected in patients with HCV-associated
hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Here, we investigated the incidence of
core+1/ARFPantibodies in chronically HCV-infected patients at different
stages of cirrhosis in comparison to chronically HCV-infected patients
at earlier stages of disease. Using ELISA, we assessed the prevalence of
anti-core+1 antibodies in 30 patients with advanced cirrhosis [model
for end-stage liver disease (MELD) >= 15] in comparison with 50 patients
with mild cirrhosis (MELD <15) and 164 chronic HCV patients without
cirrhosis. 28.7 % of HCV patients with cirrhosis were positive for
anti-core+1 antibodies, in contrast with 16.5 % of non-cirrhotic HCV
patients. Moreover, there was significantly higher positivity for
anti-core+1 antibodies in HCV patients with advanced cirrhosis (36.7 %)
compared to those with early cirrhosis (24%) (P<0.05). These findings,
together with the high prevalence of anti-core+1 antibodies in HCV
patients with HCC, suggest that core+1 protein may have a role in
virus-associated pathogenesis, and provide evidence to suggest that the
levels of anti-core+1 antibodies may serve as a marker for disease
progression
High prevalence of antibodies to core+1/ARF protein in HCV-infected patients with advanced cirrhosis
Increasing Incidence and Shifting Epidemiology of Candidemia in Greece: Results from the First Nationwide 10-Year Survey
Globally, candidemia displays geographical variety in terms of epidemiology and incidence. In that respect, a nationwide Greek study was conducted, reporting the epidemiology of Candida bloodstream infections and susceptibility of isolates to antifungal agents providing evidence for empirical treatment. All microbiologically confirmed candidemia cases in patients hospitalized in 28 Greek centres during the period 2009–2018 were recorded. The study evaluated the incidence of infection/100,000 inhabitants, species distribution, and antifungal susceptibilities of isolated strains. Overall, 6057 candidemic episodes occurred during the study period, with 3% of them being mixed candidemias. The average annual incidence was 5.56/100,000 inhabitants, with significant increase over the years (p = 0.0002). C. parapsilosis species complex (SC) was the predominant causative agent (41%), followed by C. albicans (37%), C. glabrata SC (10%), C. tropicalis (7%), C. krusei (1%), and other rare Candida spp. (4%). C. albicans rates decreased from 2009 to 2018 (48% to 31%) in parallel with a doubling incidence of C. parapsilosis SC rates (28% to 49%, p < 0.0001). Resistance to amphotericin B and flucytosine was not observed. Resistance to fluconazole was detected in 20% of C. parapsilosis SC isolates, with a 4% of them being pan-azole-resistant. A considerable rising rate of resistance to this agent was observed over the study period (p < 0.0001). Echinocandin resistance was found in 3% of C. glabrata SC isolates, with 70% of them being pan-echinocandin-resistant. Resistance rate to this agent was stable over the study period. This is the first multicentre nationwide study demonstrating an increasing incidence of candidemia in Greece with a species shift toward C. parapsilosis SC. Although the overall antifungal resistance rates remain relatively low, fluconazole-resistant C. parapsilosis SC raises concern