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Friday, May 23, 2025

Candida auris fungal infections spreading in US at 'alarming' rate, says CDC

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792 days ago
20230322
Candida auris infection. [Image courtesy BBC News / Getty Images]

Candida auris infection. [Image courtesy BBC News / Getty Images]

Sources: BBC NEWS & CBS NEWS

 

A dead­ly fun­gal in­fec­tion that is hard to treat is spread­ing rapid­ly at an "alarm­ing" rate, says the Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion (CDC), both BBC News and CBS News are re­port­ing.

The CDC re­port stat­ed that US cas­es near­ly dou­bled in 2021 from 756 to 1,471.

Healthy peo­ple are not at risk from Can­di­da au­ris but those with weak im­mune sys­tems or us­ing med­ical de­vices like ven­ti­la­tors or catheters can suf­fer se­vere ill­ness or die.

BBC News quotes the CDC re­port which notes the ma­jor­i­ty of cas­es test­ed were im­mune to an­ti-fun­gal treat­ment.

For this rea­son, the CDC has called it an "ur­gent an­timi­cro­bial re­sis­tance threat". Many pa­tients are in hos­pi­tals and el­der­ly care homes.

One in three pa­tients with in­va­sive in­fec­tions dies, but it can be dif­fi­cult to as­sess the ex­act role Can­di­da au­ris played in vul­ner­a­ble pa­tients, said CDC epi­demi­ol­o­gist Dr Meghan Ly­man, the re­port's lead au­thor, in an in­ter­view with CBS News.

The in­fec­tion was first re­port­ed in the US in 2016. The most rapid rise in cas­es was from 2020 to 2021, ac­cord­ing to CDC da­ta which was pub­lished in the An­nals of In­ter­nal Med­i­cine.

An­oth­er rea­son for con­cern was the in­crease of cas­es that be­came "re­sis­tant to echinocan­dins" which is the an­ti­fun­gal med­i­cine most rec­om­mend­ed for treat­ment of the in­fec­tion.

The CDC at­trib­ut­es the rise to poor in­fec­tion pre­ven­tion at health­care fa­cil­i­ties and en­hanced screen­ing ef­forts.

It al­so may have wors­ened due to strain on health­care and pub­lic health sys­tems dur­ing the Covid-19 pan­dem­ic.

Dr Ly­man told CBS News the rise "em­pha­sis­es the need for con­tin­ued sur­veil­lance, ex­pand­ed lab ca­pac­i­ty, quick­er di­ag­nos­tic tests, and ad­her­ence to proven in­fec­tion pre­ven­tion and con­trol".

Oth­er coun­tries have al­so been see­ing an in­crease in Can­di­da au­ris cas­es.

Last year, the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion in­clud­ed it on its list of "fun­gal pri­or­i­ty pathogens".

HealthUnited States of AmericaCDCInstagram


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