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Frequency of azole resistance in clinical and environmental strains of Aspergillus fumigatus in Turkey: a multicentre study

Author
GÜLMEZ KIVANÇ, DOLUNAY
AĞCA, HARUN
Tikvesli, Melek
AKSOY, SEÇİL
Otkun, Muserref
Sig, Ali Korhan
Ogunc, Dilara
ÖZHAK, BETİL
Topac, Tuncay
Ozdemir, Asli
Erturan, Zayre
BİRİNCİ, ASUMAN
ÇERİKÇİOĞLU, NİLGÜN
TİMUR, DEMET
EKŞİ, FAHRİYE
FINDIK, DUYGU
Gurcan, Saban
KALKANCI, AYŞE
ARIKAN AKDAĞLI, SEVTAP
Genc, Gonca
ENER, BEYZA
ERGİN, Çağrı
METİN, DİLEK YEŞİM
HİLMİOĞLU POLAT, SÜLEYHA
ÖZ, YASEMİN
Koc, Nedret
ATALAY, MUSTAFA ALTAY
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Abstract
Objectives Aspergillus fumigatus causes several diseases in humans and azole resistance in A. fumigatus strains is an important issue. The aim of this multicentre epidemiological study was to investigate the prevalence of azole resistance in clinical and environmental A. fumigatus isolates in Turkey. Methods Twenty-one centres participated in this study from 1 May 2018 to 1 October 2019. One participant from each centre was asked to collect environmental and clinical A. fumigatus isolates. Azole resistance was screened for using EUCAST agar screening methodology (EUCAST E.DEF 10.1) and was confirmed by the EUCAST E.DEF 9.3 reference microdilution method. Isolates with a phenotypic resistance pattern were sequenced for the cyp51A gene and microsatellite genotyping was used to determine the genetic relationships between the resistant strains. Results In total, resistance was found in 1.3% of the strains that were isolated from environmental samples and 3.3% of the strains that were isolated from clinical samples. Mutations in the cyp51A gene were detected in 9 (47.4%) of the 19 azole-resistant isolates, all of which were found to be TR34/L98H mutations. Microsatellite genotyping clearly differentiated the strains with the TR34/L98H mutation in the cyp51A gene from the strains with no mutation in this gene. Conclusions The rate of observed azole resistance of A. fumigatus isolates was low in this study, but the fact that more than half of the examined strains had the wild-type cyp51A gene supports the idea that other mechanisms of resistance are gradually increasing.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/183855
https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/dkac125
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Creative Commons Lisansı

İstanbul Üniversitesi Akademik Arşiv Sistemi (ilgili içerikte aksi belirtilmediği sürece) Creative Commons Alıntı-GayriTicari-Türetilemez 4.0 Uluslararası Lisansı ile lisanslanmıştır.

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
Atmire NV