Antimicrobial resistance: resistance to antifungal agents: mechanisms and clinical impact.
Despite advances in preventive, diagnostic, and therapeutic interventions, invasive fungal infections cause significant morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised patients. The burden of antifungal resistance in such high-risk patients is becoming a major concern. A better understanding of the mechanisms and clinical impact of antifungal resistance is essential to the prompt and efficient treatment of patients with invasive mycoses and to improving the outcome of such infections. Although recent guidelines have attempted to standardize antifungal susceptibility testing, limitations still exist as a result of the incomplete correlation between in vitro susceptibility and clinical response to treatment. Four major mechanisms of resistance to azoles have been identified, all of which rely on altered gene expression. Mechanisms responsible for polyene and echinocandin resistance are less well understood. In addition to discussing the molecular mechanisms of antifungal resistance, this article elaborates on the concept of clinical resistance, which is critical to the understanding of treatment failure in patients with invasive fungal infections.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Mycoses
- Microbiology
- Microbial Sensitivity Tests
- Immunocompromised Host
- Humans
- Drug Resistance, Fungal
- Antifungal Agents
- 3202 Clinical sciences
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences
- 06 Biological Sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Mycoses
- Microbiology
- Microbial Sensitivity Tests
- Immunocompromised Host
- Humans
- Drug Resistance, Fungal
- Antifungal Agents
- 3202 Clinical sciences
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences
- 06 Biological Sciences