Skip to main content

Something wicked this way comes: What health care providers need to know about Candida auris.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Schwartz, IS; Smith, SW; Dingle, TC
Published in: Can Commun Dis Rep
November 1, 2018

Candida auris is a fungal pathogen that recently emerged and rapidly spread around the globe. It is now in Canada. C. auris can cause invasive disease with high mortality rates, is frequently resistant to one or more classes of antifungals, and can be difficult to identify in some clinical microbiology laboratories. C. auris can also involve prolonged colonization of patients' skin and contamination of surrounding environments, resulting in nosocomial outbreaks in hospitals and long-term care facilities. Clinicians, infection prevention and control practitioners and public health officials should be aware of how to mitigate the threat posed by this pathogen. Index cases of C. auris should be suspected in patients with invasive candidiasis and recent hospitalization in global regions where C. auris is prevalent, as well as in patients who fail to respond to empiric antifungal therapy and from whom unidentified or unusual Candida species have been isolated. If a case of C. auris infection or colonization is identified or suspected, the following should take place: notification of local public health authorities and infection prevention and control practitioners; placement of colonized or infected patients in single rooms with routine contact precautions; daily and terminal environmental disinfection with a sporicidal agent; contact tracing and screening for C. auris transmission; and referral of suspicious or confirmed isolates to provincial laboratories. Patients with symptomatic disease should be treated with an echinocandin pending the results of antifungal susceptibility testing, preferably in consultation with an infectious disease specialist. Through the vigilance of front-line health care workers and microbiologists, robust infection prevention and control practices, and local and national surveillance efforts, C. auris can be detected quickly, infections managed and transmissions prevented to protect patients in our health care system.

Duke Scholars

Altmetric Attention Stats
Dimensions Citation Stats

Published In

Can Commun Dis Rep

DOI

ISSN

1188-4169

Publication Date

November 1, 2018

Volume

44

Issue

11

Start / End Page

271 / 276

Location

Canada
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Schwartz, I. S., Smith, S. W., & Dingle, T. C. (2018). Something wicked this way comes: What health care providers need to know about Candida auris. Can Commun Dis Rep, 44(11), 271–276. https://doi.org/10.14745/ccdr.v44i11a01
Schwartz, I. S., S. W. Smith, and T. C. Dingle. “Something wicked this way comes: What health care providers need to know about Candida auris.Can Commun Dis Rep 44, no. 11 (November 1, 2018): 271–76. https://doi.org/10.14745/ccdr.v44i11a01.
Schwartz IS, Smith SW, Dingle TC. Something wicked this way comes: What health care providers need to know about Candida auris. Can Commun Dis Rep. 2018 Nov 1;44(11):271–6.
Schwartz, I. S., et al. “Something wicked this way comes: What health care providers need to know about Candida auris.Can Commun Dis Rep, vol. 44, no. 11, Nov. 2018, pp. 271–76. Pubmed, doi:10.14745/ccdr.v44i11a01.
Schwartz IS, Smith SW, Dingle TC. Something wicked this way comes: What health care providers need to know about Candida auris. Can Commun Dis Rep. 2018 Nov 1;44(11):271–276.

Published In

Can Commun Dis Rep

DOI

ISSN

1188-4169

Publication Date

November 1, 2018

Volume

44

Issue

11

Start / End Page

271 / 276

Location

Canada