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Increasing prevalence, molecular characterization and antifungal drug susceptibility of serial Candida auris isolates in Kuwait

  • Ziauddin Khan ,

    Roles Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Methodology, Project administration, Resources, Supervision, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    zkhan@hsc.edu.kw

    Affiliation Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait

  • Suhail Ahmad,

    Roles Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Visualization, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait

  • Noura Al-Sweih,

    Roles Conceptualization, Resources, Supervision, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait

  • Leena Joseph,

    Roles Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Writing – original draft

    Affiliation Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait

  • Wadha Alfouzan,

    Roles Data curation, Validation, Writing – original draft

    Affiliation Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait

  • Mohammad Asadzadeh

    Roles Data curation, Formal analysis, Methodology, Writing – original draft

    Affiliation Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait

Abstract

Candida auris is an emerging yeast pathogen of global significance. Its multidrug-resistant nature and inadequacies of conventional identification systems pose diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. This study investigated occurrence of C. auris in clinical specimens in Kuwait and its susceptibility to antifungal agents. Clinical yeast strains isolated during 3.5-year period and forming pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida were studied by wet mount examination for microscopic morphology and Vitek 2 yeast identification system. A simple species-specific PCR assay was developed for molecular identification and results were confirmed by PCR-sequencing of rDNA. Antifungal susceptibility testing of one isolate from each patient was determined by Etest. The 280 isolates forming pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida, were identified by Vitek 2 as Candida haemulonii (n = 166), Candida utilis (n = 49), Candida kefyr (n = 45), Candida guilliermondii (n = 9), Candida famata (n = 6) and Candida conglobata (n = 5). Species-specific PCR and PCR-sequencing of rDNA identified 166 C. haemulonii isolates as C. auris (n = 158), C. haemulonii (n = 6) and Candida duobushaemulonii (n = 2). C. auris isolates originated from diverse clinical specimens from 56 patients. Of 56 C. auris isolates tested, all were resistant to fluconazole, 41/56 (73%) and 13/56 (23%) were additionally resistant to voriconazole and amphotericin B, respectively. Eleven (20%) isolates were resistant to fluconazole, voriconazole and amphotericin B. One isolate was resistant to caspofungin and micafungin. Increasing isolation of C. auris in recent years from diverse clinical specimens including bloodstream shows that C. auris is an emerging non-albicans Candida species in Kuwait causing a variety of infections. Inability of conventional identification methods to accurately identify this pathogen and multidrug-resistant nature of many strains calls for a greater understanding of its epidemiology, risk factors for acquiring C. auris infection and management strategies in high-risk patients. This is the first comprehensive study on the emergence of this multidrug-resistant yeast from Kuwait and the Middle East.

Introduction

Candida auris is an emerging multidrug-resistant yeast that can cause invasive infections and is associated with high mortality [14]. The species was first identified in 2009 from external ear sample of a Japanese patient [5]. C. auris has now been recognized as an important nosocomial pathogen in many countries causing bloodstream infections, ventriculitis, osteomyelitis, otomastoiditis, chronic ostitis media, intraabdominal infections, pericarditis, pleural efffusion and vulvovaginitis [1, 38]. Outbreaks of C. auris infections have also been reported in hospitalized patients from Pakistan, the United Kingdom, Spain and Venezuela [2, 911]. C. auris is usually misidentified by routinely used phenotypic methods in clinical microbiology laboratories and many strains are intrinsically resistant to multiple antifungal agents [3, 7, 12, 13]. Due to high mortality rates associated with C. auris infections in critically ill patients, this species is now attracting worldwide attention as an opportunistic fungal pathogen [3, 7, 14]. Application of molecular identification methods based on sequencing of rDNA and/or protein profiling by Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) have led to the recognition of C. auris infections in many countries of Africa, Europe, North and South Americas and Asia including the Middle East [1, 3, 13, 15]. Although all unusual and rare yeast isolates that were referred to the Mycology Reference Laboratory from 2005 were identified by PCR-sequencing of ITS region and/or D1/D2 domains of rDNA, no C. auris was identified until 2014. However, 7 C. haemulonii strains that caused an outbreak in Maternity Hospital in Kuwait were identified in 2005–2006 [16]. This retrospective study investigated the occurrence of C. auris among clinical yeast isolates forming pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida that were recovered from diverse clinical specimens including bloodstream during a 3.5-year duration in Kuwait. A simple species-specific PCR assay was developed for rapid molecular identification of C. auris isolates and the results were confirmed by PCR-sequencing of rDNA. Antifungal susceptibility testing of one isolate from each patient was also determined.

Materials and methods

Reference strains, clinical isolates and phenotypic identification

Reference strains or well characterized clinical isolates of Candida dubliniensis (CD36), Candida albicans (ATCC 90028), Candida glabrata (ATCC 90030), C. parapsilosis (ATCC 22019), C. orthopsilosis (ATCC 96139), Candida tropicalis (ATCC 750), Candida kefyr (Kw1609/11), Candida conglobata (Kw381/16), Candida utilis (Kw3642/15), Candida fermentati (Kw3414/13), Candida guilliermondii (Kw14/14), Candida haemulonii (Kw154/06), Candida duobushaemulonii (Kw3270/08) and Candida auris (Kw2611/17) were used as reference Candida species. Clinical yeast strains cultured from various clinical specimens during a 3.5-year (May 2014 to September 2017) period forming pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida and not recognized as one of the common Candida spp. by VITEK 2 were subjected to detailed phenotypic and molecular identification. The clinical specimens (including invasive samples) were collected from patients after obtaining verbal consent at different hospitals across Kuwait as part of routine diagnostic work-up for fungal infections. A total of 280 clinical yeast isolates forming pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida were used. The isolates were sent from different hospitals across Kuwait to Mycology Reference Laboratory, Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine; Kuwait University for identification and antifungal susceptibility testing. The isolates were studied by wet mount examination of the culture for microscopic morphology and by Vitek 2 yeast identification system (bioMérieux, Marcy-l’Etoile, France) for species identification. The study was approved by the Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects in Research, Health Sciences Center, Kuwait University and Ministry of Health, Kuwait (Approval no. VDR/EC/2477).

Molecular identification and characterization

The genomic DNA from reference strains and clinical isolates of Candida species was prepared by the rapid method using Chelex-100, as described previously [17]. A simple, low-cost PCR assay was developed for rapid molecular identification of C. auris isolates. For this purpose, one forward (CAURF, 5’-ATTTTGCATACACACTGATTTG-3’) and one reverse (CAURR, 5’-CGTGCAAGCTGTAATTTTGTGA-3’) primer targeting specific sequences within ITS-1 and ITS-2 regions of rDNA of C. auris were synthesized. The unique primer sequences designed in this study were based on sequence alignment of ITS region sequences from multiple strains of all commonly encountered clinical yeast species that are available from the GenBank. The species specificity of the primers CAURF and CAURR for C. auris was indicated by BLAST searches (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi) as they showed complete sequence identity only with C. auris strains. The reaction and PCR cycling conditions were same as described previously except that primers CAURF and CAURR were used [17]. PCR amplicons were run on 2% (w/v) agarose gels, as described previously [18]. The results of species-specific identification of 16 selected C. auris isolates and all C. haemulonii/C. duobushaemulonii isolates were confirmed by DNA sequencing of the ITS region of rDNA. The ITS region was amplified by using ITS1 and ITS4 panfungal primers and both strands of the amplicons were sequenced by using ITS1FS, ITS2, ITS3 and ITS4RS primers as described previously [19, 20]. BLAST searches (http://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi?) were performed and >99% sequence identity was used for species identification.

The genotypic relationship among C. auris was studied by comparing ITS region sequences of C. auris isolates. Genotypic heterogeneity was further investigated by fingerprinting of the isolates by using minisatellite-based (M13-MIN, 5’-GAGGGTGGCGGTTCT-3’) and microsatellite-based (GACA4, 5’-GACAGACAGACAGACA-3’) primers, as described previously [21].

Antifungal susceptibility testing

Antifungal susceptibility of 56 C. auris isolates (representing one isolate from each patient) was determined by Etest as described previously [22]. Etest strips for amphotericin B (AP), fluconazole (FL), voriconazole (VO) caspofungin (CS) and micafungin (MYC) (bioMérieux SA, Marcy-l’-Etoile, France) were used. So far, there are no approved antifungal susceptibility breakpoints for C. auris. However, based on CLSI and EUCAST susceptibility data, tentative minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) breakpoints defining resistance have been proposed as follows: fluconazole, ≥32 μg/ml; voriconazole, ≥1 μg/ml; amphotericin B, ≥2 μg/ml; micafungin, ≥4 μg/ml and caspofungin, ≥2 μg/ml [1, 12, 23].

Results

Phenotypic and molecular identification of pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida

A total of 280 isolates formed pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida during the study period and were subjected to detailed phenotypic and molecular characterization. The Vitek 2 yeast identification system identified these isolates as C. haemulonii (n = 166), Candida utilis (n = 49), Candida kefyr (n = 45), Candida guilliermondii (n = 9), Candida famata (n = 6) and Candida conglobata (n = 5) (Table 1).

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Table 1. Identification of 280 Candida spp. isolates forming pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida by Vitek 2, C. auris-specifc PCR assay developed in this study and PCR-sequencing of rDNA.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195743.t001

The PCR amplification performed with CAURF and CAURR primers yielded an expected size amplicon of nearly 276 bp with DNA extracted from the reference strain of C. auris only while no amplicon was obtained with genomic DNA prepared from reference strains or well characterized clinical isolates of C. dubliniensis, C. albicans, C. glabrata, C. parapsilosis, C. orthopsilosis, C. tropicalis, C. kefyr, C. utilis, C. guilliermondii, C. haemulonii, and C. duobushaemulonii, as expected (S1 Fig). No amplicon was also obtained with DNA isolated from C. fermentati as well as with human DNA (data not shown). Of 280 isolates analyzed in this study, no amplicon was obtained during PCR amplification with CAURF and CAURR primers with DNA isolated from 114 isolates forming pink-colored colonies on CHROMagar Candida and identified as C. utilis (n = 49), C. kefyr (n = 45), C. guilliermondii (n = 9), C. famata (n = 6) and C. conglobata (n = 5) by Vitek 2. However, PCR amplification of DNA isolated from 166 isolates phenotypically identified as C. haemulonii (described above) by Vitek 2 with CAURF and CAURR primers showed that 158 isolates were actually C. auris as they yielded an amplicon of 276 bp while the remaining 8 isolates did not yield an amplicon (Table 1). PCR-sequencing of 16 selected C. auris isolates matched completely with the ITS region sequence of reference and several other strains of C. auris from India but were different from the sequences of C. auris isolates from Japan, South Africa and Venezuela. PCR-sequencing of ITS region of rDNA also identified the latter 8 isolates as C. haemulonii (n = 6) and C. duobushaemulonii (n = 2) (Table 1). PCR-sequencing of rDNA also identified all C. utilis, C. conglobata and selected isolates of C. kefyr and C. guilliermondii. However, all 6 isolates identified as C. famata by Vitek 2 were correctly identified as C. fermentati by PCR-sequencing of rDNA (Table 1). None of the C. auris isolate showed hyphae or pseudohyphae on wet mount examination of cultures [3].

Epidemiology of C. auris infections in Kuwait

The 158 C. auris isolates came from 56 (31 males and 25 females) patients (S1 Table). All the patients yielding C. auris were admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) or other wards in different hospitals across Kuwait for various life-threatening conditions and for different time-periods extending up to several months in some cases. The patient’s age ranged from 13 to 89 years. None of the C. auris isolate came from a pediatric patient (≤12 years). Thirty-five patients were Kuwaiti nationals and 10 patients were expatriates originating from 5 different countries while the remaining 11 were only classified as non-Kuwaiti patients. The origin of 158 C. auris isolates from different specimens is provided in Table 2. Thirty-one patients yielded multiple isolates either from the same or different clinical specimens and seven patients remained colonized with C. auris for an extended period of time ranging from 70 days to 11 months (S1 Table). Interestingly, 16 bloodstream isolates were obtained from 13 patients and 5 of these patients also yielded C. auris from 1–4 other anatomical sites (S1 Table). Furthermore, 24 elderly (≥65 year old) patients yielded most (83 of 158, 53%) of the C. auris isolates described in this study and 21 of these patients were hospitalized in a single healthcare facility. Also, 12 patients were ≥80 year old, hospitalized in the same facility and yielded 60 isolates from different/multiple anatomic sites (S1 Table).

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Table 2. Origin of 158 C. auris isolates in diverse clinical specimens obtained from 56 patients in Kuwait.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195743.t002

Molecular fingerprinting of C. auris isolates

The ITS region of all 16 C. auris isolates that were sequenced were identical. Furthermore, PCR fingerprinting performed with minisatellite-based (M13-MIN) and microsatellite-based (GACA4) primers yielded identical patterns of amplified fragments from all C. auris isolates (data from 6 selected isolates are shown in S2 Fig) suggesting close genotypic relationship among the isolates.

Antifungal susceptibility testing data

Antifungal susceptibility of C. auris was determined for one representative isolate from each patient and the data are presented in Table 3. All isolates were resistant to fluconazole with MICs of 128 to ≥256 μg/ml. The MICs for voriconazole were quite variable ranging between 0.064 to 6 μg/ml (geometric mean 1.20±1.06 μg/ml). Taking an arbitrary break point of ≥1 μg/ml, 41 (73.2%) isolates were additionally resistant to voriconazole. Resistance to amphotericin B (≥2 μg/ml) was observed in 13 (23.2%) isolates with a geometric mean of 1.05±0.74 μg/ml (Table 3). Eleven (19.6%) isolates were resistant to fluconazole, voriconazole and amphotericin B. One isolate obtained from urine specimen of a patient who was operated for colorectal cancer was resistant to caspofungin and micafungin (MIC = 4 μg/ml). The MIC50 and MIC90 values for amphotericin B, fluconazole, voriconazole, caspofungin and micafungin were 1.5 and 2 μg/ml, ≥256 and ≥256 μg/ml, 1.5 and 3 μg/ml, 0.19 and 0.38 μg/ml and 0.094 and 0.125 μg/ml, respectively (Table 3).

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Table 3. MIC50, MIC90, MIC range and geometric mean of five antifungal agents for 56 C. auris isolates by Etest.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195743.t003

Discussion

Colony characteristics (pink-colored colonies) of C. auris on CHROMagar Candida are similar to several other Candida species and commercial yeast identification systems such as Vitek 2 also routinely identify clinical C. auris isolates as C. haemulonii [3, 13, 24, 25]. With the application of molecular methods in clinical microbiology laboratories and some other, as yet, undefined factors, this multidrug-resistant species is now being isolated from clinical specimens with increasing frequency worldwide [2, 911, 14, 2632]. C. auris was isolated for the first time in May 2014 in Kuwait from a case of fungemia in a 27-year-old woman who was admitted to intensive care unit for septic shock secondary to lobar pneumonia [33]. During the same year, 4 additional isolates were recovered from urine specimens of three individual Kuwaiti patients (including 2 isolates from one patient) admitted in the same hospital. This is despite the fact that all yeast isolates not belonging to common Candida species were identified by PCR-sequencing of ITS region and/or D1/D2 domains of rDNA from 2005 in Kuwait [3437]. This approach was successful in identifying 7 C. haemulonii isolates that caused an outbreak in Maternity hospital in 2005–2006 [16]. The frequency of isolation of C. auris increased substantially after 2014 as 37 isolates were cultured during 2015, 60 isolates were cultured in 2016 and 56 isolates were cultured until September 2017. Furthermore, 3 and 4 bloodstream isolates were obtained from 2 and 3 candidemia patients in 2015 and 2016, respectively. Consistent with this increasing trend of C. auris infections, 8 bloodstream isolates from 7 candidemia patients were already recovered in the first 9 months of 2017. In addition to bloodstream, C. auris was also isolated from tissue specimens obtained from arteriovenous fistula, abdominal fluid/pleural fluid specimens and eye swab from a case of endophthalmitis suggesting invasive infections (S1 Table). Interestingly, 24 elderly patients yielded 83 of 158 (53%) C. auris isolates from different/multiple specimens and were colonized for extended period of time in some cases. Notably, 21 of 24 elderly patients (including all ≥80 year-old patients) with protracted illness were hospitalized in a single healthcare facility, suggesting the presence/persistence of C. auris in the indoor environment of this hospital. The persistence of C. auris in the hospital environment has also been noted in several other studies (7, 9, 10, 31).

All 56 individual patient C. auris isolates were resistant to fluconazole, 13 (23%) were resistant to fluconazole and amphotericin B and 11 (19.6%) were resistant to fluconazole, voriconazole and amphotericin B. No obvious reason could be attributed to the sudden increase in the isolation of this multidrug-resistant pathogen in Kuwait in recent years. Similar observations of rapid emergence of C. auris in some states of USA, where molecular detection of fungal pathogens is routinely performed, have also been made [14, 32, 33]. Of 174 confirmed clinical C. auris cases reported from 10 states in USA until November 30, 2017, 148 cases were reported from only two states on the east coast (New York, n = 110 and New Jersey, n = 38) showing a disproportionate distribution of these cases in different states in USA (https://www.cdc.gov/fungal/diseases/candidiasis/tracking-c-auris.html). The reasons for this preponderance of C. auris cases in these two states are not clear. Furthermore, 257 patients in only 4 states with clinical cases were found to be colonized with C. auris. A large outbreak of C. auris infections involving 44 patients has also been reported in hospitalized patients from the United Kingdom highlighting the rapid emergence and spreading of this multidrug-resistant pathogen in healthcare facilities in this country [9]. Another large outbreak involving 64 candidemia cases in Valencia, Spain has also been described recently [Ruiz-Gaitan, unpublished data].

The ability of C. auris isolates to grow at 40–42°C, inability to produce hyphae or pseudohyphae in culture and resistance to fluconazole should prompt clinical microbiology laboratories to seek identification of the yeast isolate by molecular methods [3, 24, 25, 38]. In a recent study, growth characteristics of four C. auris isolates with other Candida species in Sabouraud broth and yeast nitrogen base containing 10% NaCl (wt/vol) incubated at 40°C with/without supplementation with dextrose, dulcitol or mannitol were compared [39]. While C. auris strains grew in this medium, C. haemulonii, C. doubushaemulonii, C. albicans and C. parapsilosis isolates failed to grow. C. glabrata showed growth only in Sabouraud broth containing dextrose [39]. Recently, CHROMagar Candida medium supplemented with Pal’s medium has been evaluated for differentiation of C. auris from isolates belonging to C. haemulonii complex [40]. However, large-scale evaluation of this medium is required for reliable identification of C. auris.

For rapid molecular identification, Kordalewska et al. [15] developed a species-specific thermal PCR and a C. haemulonii complex-specific real-time PCR assay to identify C. auris and related species (C. haemulonii, C. duobushaemulonii and C. lusitaniae). The species-specific PCR assay developed in this study for rapid identification of C. auris is also simple and cost effective as the whole procedure can be completed within 4 hours using basic PCR and gel electrophoresis equipment and will cost only ~1 US$ per sample (excluding the cost of culture and personnel time). MALDI-TOF MS can also differentiate C. auris from other Candida species [24, 25]. We used 12 other Candida species during specificity testing of our PCR assay. The DNA from C. fermentati also did not yield an amplicon in PCR, as expected (data not shown). However, we did not test C. famata, R. glutinis and C. catenulata which are sometimes reported in place of C. auris by Vitek 2. However, based on BLAST searches, our primers do not show identity with the sequences of the corresponding region from these species. Although updated versions of MALDI-TOF MS can identify C. auris, it is yet to be updated in Kuwait. PCR-sequencing of 16 selected C. auris isolates were identical and matched completely with corresponding sequences of C. auris from India but were different from the sequences of C. auris isolates from Japan, South Africa and Venezuela. All C. auris isolates also yielded identical fingerprinting patterns by minisatellite-based and microsatellite-based primers which is consistent with the highly clonal nature of this yeast species [2, 7, 27].

Consistent with published reports [2, 3, 24], all (56, 100%) individual patient’s C. auris isolates were resistant to fluconazole and 41 (73.2%) isolates to voriconazole. Also 13 (23%) isolates were resistant to amphotericin B highlighting the multidrug-resistant (MDR) nature of this organism (1–4, 7, 14, 24, 26, 27). Only one isolate in our study was resistant to caspofungin and micafungin (MIC = 4 μg/ml). This isolate was obtained from the urine specimen of a patient who was operated for colorectal cancer. Resistance to echinocandins in Candida species is generally low, not exceeding 3% [41, 42]. Resistance of C. auris to echinocandins has also been found to be generally lower compared to polyenes [3, 27]. However, resistance in up to 7% C. auris isolates has been reported in one study [24].

Although 13 (23%) isolates were classified as resistant to amphotericin B, the actual number of amphotericin B-resistant isolates may be even higher. This is due to the fact that no clinical breakpoints are available for amphotericin B for C. auris. Tentative breakpoints for fluconazole, amphotericin B, and echinocandins have recently been proposed [2, 12, 21]. The Etest invariably yields much lower MIC values for amphotericin B (presumably due to a narrow calibration of concentration gradient on the strip). In a previous study comparing MIC distribution of 90 C. auris isolates by CLSI-BMD, Vitek 2 and Etest, the MIC90 values for amphotericin B were 4, 16 and 1 μg/ml, respectively [24]. Using tentative breakpoint of ≥2 μg/ml for amphotericin B resistance, the percentage of resistant isolates by the CLSI-BMD, Vitek 2 and Etest were 15.5%, 100% and 1.1%, respectively, indicating considerable differences in the MICs obtained by the three methods [24]. Based on pharmacokinetic studies in a mouse model of C. auris infection [43], it has been suggested that isolates showing MIC of ≥2 μg/ml by broth microdilution test may be considered as resistant to amphotericin B. Since under standard dosing, the breakpoints for amphotericin B are estimated to be 1 or 1.5 μg/ml, it may, therefore, be appropriate if Etest MICs of 1.5 μg/ml for C. auris are also rounded off to 2 μg/ml, as is practiced for other Candida species [21, 44]. If these revised cut-off values are adopted in our study, the number of isolates classified as amphotericin B-resistant will climb to 29 (52%).

Candida auris is a persistent colonizer and difficult to eradicate from the hospital environment [4, 6, 39, 45]. Its ability to form biofilms on a variety of surfaces and lack of activity of some antifungal agents such as fluconazole against C. auris may have contributed to its persistence and nosocomial transmission [3, 9, 30, 31, 39, 46]. In our study, two patients (both 80 year-old females) remained colonized for nearly 9 months (P39) and 11 months (P29) in the respiratory and/or urinary tract and C. auris was also isolated from the catheter tip, however, both patients did not develop candidemia, likely because they were treated with caspofungin prophylactically. In addition to demonstrating excellent activity of echinocandins against C. auris, our data also show that this multidrug-resistant species persists in colonized patients in hospital settings and the importance of devising effective measures for decontamination of the patients to prevent further inter- and intra-hospital transmission of C. auris [3, 4, 6, 47, 48].

Our study has a few limitations. i) The MICs for antifungal drugs were only determined by Etest and not by reference broth microdilution method. ii) The MIC values were determined for the first isolate from each patient and were not determined for repeat isolates.

Conclusions

Isolation of C. auris from diverse clinical specimens including bloodstream with increasing frequency in recent years show that C. auris is a rapidly emerging pathogen in Kuwait. A simple, low-cost PCR assay has also been developed for its rapid identification. All C. auris isolates obtained from hospitalized patients in Kuwait were resistant to fluconazole, and 13 and 11 isolates were multidrug-resistant strains as they were additionally resistant to amphotericin B and amphotericin B + voriconazole, respectively. Inability of conventional yeast identification methods to accurately identify this pathogen and multidrug-resistant nature of many strains calls for a greater understanding of its epidemiology, risk factors for acquiring C. auris infection and management strategies in high-risk patients. This is the first comprehensive report highlighting the increasing prevalence of this multidrug-resistant yeast in Kuwait and the Middle East.

Supporting information

S1 Table. Source and date of isolation and demographic data of 56 patients yielding 158 C. auris isolates in Kuwait analyzed in this study.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195743.s001

(DOCX)

S1 Fig. Agarose gel of PCR amplicons obtained with C. auris-specific (CAURF and CAURR) primers and genomic DNA from reference strains of C. dubliniensis (lane 1), C. albicans (lane 2), C. glabrata (lane 3), C. parapsilosis (lane 3), C. orthopsilosis (lane 4), C. tropicalis (lane 5), C. kefyr (lane 6), L. conglobata (lane 7), C. utilis (lane 8), C. guilliermondii (lane 9), C. haemulonii (lane 10), C. duobushaemulonii (lane 11) and C. auris (lane 12).

Lane M is 100 bp DNA ladder and the positions of migration of 100 bp, 300 bp and 600 bp fragments are marked.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195743.s002

(DOCX)

S2 Fig. Agarose gel of PCR products obtained during fingerprinting with minisatellite-based (M13-MIN) primer (Panel A) and microsatellite-based (GACA4) primer (Panel B) with genomic DNA isolated from 6 C. auris isolates (lanes 1–6).

Lane M is 100 bp DNA ladder and the positions of migration of 100 bp and 600 bp fragments are marked.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195743.s003

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

We thank Sandhya Vayalil, Soumya Varghese and Omar Al-Musallam for technical assistance.

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