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Susceptibility tests of oropharyngeal Candida albicans from Egyptian patients to fluconazole determined by three methods

Abstract

Candida albicans frequently cause oropharyngeal candidiasis in immunocompromised patients. As some of these isolates show resistance against azoles, the clinician is wary of initiating therapy with fluconazole (FZ) until a final susceptibility report is generated. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of rapid flow cytometry (FCM) and disc diffusion (DD) methods in comparison to reference microdilution (MD) of Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) method for FZ. Thirty seven Candida albicans isolates were tested by the three methods. By both MD and FCM, 26/37 (70.3%) were sensitive with minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) ≤ 8μg/ml, 5/37 (13.5%) were susceptible dose dependant (S-DD) with MIC 16-32 μg/ml and 6/37 (16.2%) were resistant with MIC ≥64μg/ml. More than 92% of isolates susceptible to FZ by the MD were susceptible by the DD methods with good agreement (81.08%, P = 0.000). However, 4/5 isolates diagnosed as S-DD by MD were resistant by DD. Interestingly, the MIC by FCM at 4 h showed excellent agreement (95.59%, P = 0.000) to that obtained by MD method at 24 h. Overall, FCM antifungal susceptibility testing provided rapid, reproducible results that are valuable alternative to MD. The DD test is recommended as a simple and reliable screening test for the detection of susceptible Candida albicans isolates to FZ.

CLSI; Disk diffusion; flowcytometry; fluconazole; malignant patients; NCCLS


MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY

Susceptibility tests of oropharyngeal Candida albicans from Egyptian patients to fluconazole determined by three methods

Noha El-Mashad; Mona F. Foad; Niveen Saudy; Dalia A. Salem

Department of Clinical Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Egypt

ABSTRACT

Candida albicans frequently cause oropharyngeal candidiasis in immunocompromised patients. As some of these isolates show resistance against azoles, the clinician is wary of initiating therapy with fluconazole (FZ) until a final susceptibility report is generated. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of rapid flow cytometry (FCM) and disc diffusion (DD) methods in comparison to reference microdilution (MD) of Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) method for FZ. Thirty seven Candida albicans isolates were tested by the three methods. By both MD and FCM, 26/37 (70.3%) were sensitive with minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) ≤ 8μg/ml, 5/37 (13.5%) were susceptible dose dependant (S-DD) with MIC 16-32 μg/ml and 6/37 (16.2%) were resistant with MIC ≥64μg/ml. More than 92% of isolates susceptible to FZ by the MD were susceptible by the DD methods with good agreement (81.08%, P = 0.000). However, 4/5 isolates diagnosed as S-DD by MD were resistant by DD. Interestingly, the MIC by FCM at 4 h showed excellent agreement (95.59%, P = 0.000) to that obtained by MD method at 24 h. Overall, FCM antifungal susceptibility testing provided rapid, reproducible results that are valuable alternative to MD. The DD test is recommended as a simple and reliable screening test for the detection of susceptible Candida albicans isolates to FZ.

Key word: CLSI, Disk diffusion, flowcytometry, fluconazole, malignant patients, NCCLS

INTRODUCTION

Oropharyngeal candidiasis is a common infection in cancer patients receiving therapies. The oral mucosal infection (ranging from 17 to 29%) with Candida albicans are particularly common in onco-hematological patients resulted in a higher risk for developing invasive candidiasis with an attributable mortality around 40% (23).

Fluconazole (FZ), a well-tolerated and safe triazole antifungal agent that distributes widely in body tissues and is active against the major fungal pathogens in immunocompromized patients with few side effects. Its empiric use in onco-haematological patients may result in a higher colonization rate with FZ-resistant Candida species (28). Careful periodical surveillance is needed in order to identify any changes in the susceptibility patterns of FZ with the increased use of this antifungal agent (8, 15).

The "Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute" (CLSI; formerly NCCLS) Subcommittee on Antifungal Susceptibility Tests has developed reproducible procedures for the antifungal susceptibility testing of yeasts for fluconazole by broth microdilution MD (documents M27-A2) method (3, 6). Because this method is time consuming, difficult to perform and labor intensive, alternative rapid and reliable methods are needed (19). Agar based method as disk diffusion (DD) is attractive because of its simplicity and low-cost (1, 10). CLSI had also established a DD procedure of yeasts for FZ (document M44-A) (7). Several years ago, it was suggested that flow cytometry (FCM) might be useful for susceptibility testing of micro-organisms, as drug-induced cell damage could be assessed by use of various fluorescent dyes on a cell-by-cell basis (20, 24 )

A rapid reliable susceptibility testing method would enable the clinician to prescribe the most suitable antifungal agent, thus avoiding more toxic or expensive therapy. In this aspect we aimed to evaluate the efficacy of rapid FCM and DD in comparison to reference MD method for FZ susceptibility testing of Candida albicans isolates.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Microorganisms

They were 37 Candida albicans isolated from recurrent oral candidiasis of onco-hematological patients. The patients were randomly selected from Out Patient Clinic of Oncology Center, Mansoura University Hospital, Egypt. No patient was under treatment with antifungal drugs. Oral consents were obtained that were approved by ethical committee of Mansoura Faculty of Medicine, Egypt. The isolates were identified by morphology, microscopy, germ tube test and subjected to metabolic evaluation by use of API 20C system (Biomerieux, SA, Marcy-l'Etoile, France). Candida albicans isolates were stored in sterile distilled water in 50% glycerol at -70°C. Each isolate was subcultured twice on Sabouraud dextrose agar (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, USA) and incubated at 35°C to ensure purity and optimal growth. All isolates were subcultured again 24 h prior to testing (12).

Antifungal Susceptibility testing

Inoculum suspensions: Yeast inoculums suspensions were prepared as described in CLSI M27-A2. Briefly, for each isolate, 5 colonies greater than 1 mm in diameter were selected, suspended in 0.9% saline solution and adjusted to a final concentration of 0.5 Mc Farland standard (Sigma, St. Louis, USA) with approximately 1 - 5 x 106 CFU/ml. This suspension was used directly to inoculate agar plates for disk diffusion (DD) procedure and flow cytometry (FCM) procedure or was diluted for the microdilution (MD) procedure as following: the suspensions were further diluted to a ratio of 1:50 in 5 ml sterile saline and then diluted to a ratio of 1:20 in RPMI 1640 to attain a final inoculum concentration in the titration wells of 1.5 ±1.0 x 103 cells/ml. Each dilution was vortexed for 30 seconds before proceeding (6, 16)

Antifungal agents: The antifungal agent fluconazole (FZ) (SEDICO Pharmaceutical Co., 6 October City-Egypt) was used in the susceptibility tests. For MD and FCM procedures, FZ powder was dissolved in distilled water to yield stock solutions containing 6400µg /mL and were stored at-70°C in 400 µL aliquots until used. Serial two fold dilutions of FZ were prepared with RPMI 1640 containing L-glutamine without bicarbonate, buffered to pH 7.0 with 0.165M morpholinepropane sulfonic acid (MOPS; Sigma). The final concentrations were 0.125 to 64µg/ml. For DD procedure, FZ disks containing 25µg (Becton Dickinson, Sparks, MD) were used.

Procedures

1- Broth microdilution assay MD (document M27-A2): The susceptibility assays were performed in sterile 96-well round bottom microplates as described previously. For each drug concentration (from 0.125 to 64µg/m), 100 µl were dispensed in microwells of titration plate. Then, 100 µl of the prepared organism suspension was pipetted in each well reaching a final test volume of 200 µl. For each isolate, a growth control well contained yeast suspension and RPMI 1640 without FZ was prepared. After 24 hours of incubation at 35°C, MIC (minimum inhibitory concentration) was determined visually by comparing its turbidity with the drug-free growth control well. The MIC was defined as the lowest drug concentration that cause ≥50% growth inhibition compared to drug-free growth control well. Final inoculum's size was confirmed by subculture and colony count. Isolates were classified as susceptible if the MIC for the isolate was ≤8 µg/ml, susceptible-dose dependent (S-DD) if the MIC was 16 - 32 µg/ml, and resistant if the MIC was ≥64 µg/ml (4, 6).

2- Flow Cytometry (FCM) method: Adjusted inocula of yeast cells killed by boiling at 100°C for 20 min were used as a staining control. Propidium iodide (PI) (Sigma, P4170-10MG, USA), a membrane-impermeable DNA-intercalating dye, was used to stain the yeast cells. Sodium deoxycholate (Sigma),a detergent, was used to facilitate diffusion of PI into the yeast cell membranes which were damaged by FZ. One-half milliliter of the yeast suspension (adjusted to 0.5 McFarland standard) was added to 0.5 ml of serial two fold FZ dilutions and incubated at 35°C for 4 h. The growth control tube received 0.5 ml of drug diluting fluid without FZ. At the end of incubation, 200 µl of each mixture was placed in 12- by 75-mm polystyrene tubes. Two hundred microliters of 25 mM sodium deoxy-cholate and 10 µl of 1% PI were added to each dilution. The tubes were mixed by flicking with fingers and incubated for 5 min at room temperature in the dark before FCM analysis. The samples were analyzed with a FAC Scan flow cytometry (Becton Dickinson, Lincoln Park,, N.J, USA.) and Cell Quest software for data acquisition and analysis. Ten thousand yeast cells were analyzed for forward scatter (3.73 linear gain), side scatter (270-V log), log of red fluorescence, FL2 (457-V log), threshold value 52, and mean channel fluorescence (MCF; intensity of fluorescence of yeasts labeled with PI). Controls included samples containing viable cells, heat-killed cells, cells with sodium deoxycholate, and cells with PI and sodium deoxycholate. The MIC was defined as the lowest concentration of drug that showed an increase of 50% in MCF compared to that of the growth control (12, 22).

3- Disk diffusion procedure DD (document M44-A): The adjusted inocula to 0.5 McFarland standard and test disks contained 25µg. FZ were used. A sterile cotton swab was dipped in the suspension and streaked in many directions over the entire surface of the plate containing Mueller-Hinton agar supplemented with 2% glucose and 0.5 µg/ml methylene blue (due to the ability of that medium to produce enhanced definition of growth margins). The plates were allowed to dry for 5-15 minutes before the FZ discs were applied on the agar plates. They were then incubated at 35℃ for 24h. The inhibition zone sizes were measured in millimeters. The isolates with the zone diameters of ≥19 mm were reported as sensitive to FZ, those of 15-18mm as susceptible-dose-dependant (S-DD) while the ones ≤14 mm were reported to be resistant (5, 10).

Statistical analysis

Reliability and reproducibility were assessed with the use of Kappa coefficient test. It represents the percentage of instances of agreement between MD method (standard) and either disc diffusion or flowcytometry. It was considered agreement when MIC results of test and MD method were in exact agreement. P<0.05 is significant and P<0.001 is highly significant.

RESULTS

MICs of fluconazole (FZ) by broth micro-dilution (MD) method were determined for 37 Candida albicans isolates after 24 h using the CLSI guidelines. Six of them (16%) were found to be resistant and 5 (13.5%) were S-DD (Table 1).

Table 2 shows the comparison of results for all isolates by the MD and FCM analysis for FZ. It revealed that MICs were within two drug dilutions of those of the reference method for most isolates.

Also, disc diffusion (DD) testing of all Candida isolates to FZ was performed. On measuring the inhibition zone diameters of 25 μg FZ disk for the 6 resistant strains by MD, 5 (83%) had confirmed to be resistant by zone diameters of <14 mm while the remaining strain was of S-DD with a zone diameter 15 mm. Moreover, out of the 5 S-DD strains, only 1 (20%) confirmed to be S-DD with zone diameter of 16 mm and.4 (80%) were resistant with zone diameters of <14 mm. Interestingly, among a total of 26 strains found to be susceptible by the MD method, 2 (7.7%) yielded FZ zone sizes of < 19 mm and would have been misclassified as resistant or S-DD strains on the basis of the disc test (Table 3).

The levels of agreement between the MD and either DD or FCM (Table 4) showed that FCM was of excellent agreement while DD showed good agreement with a highly significant correlation (P; 0.000)

DISCUSSION

The increasing number of clinical isolates of oropharngeal Candida albicans resistant to antifungal therapy led to a demand for susceptibility testing of fungi to provide the treating clinician with MIC end points which are reproducible and predictive of therapeutic success or failure. They are only useful clinically if the results are determined after a short incubation period (13, 26).

Our study compared three methods for evaluation of the antifungal susceptibility of yeasts to fluconazole: flow cytometry (FCM) assay (after 4h) and disk diffusion (DD) test ( after 24 h) in comparison to the standardized anti-fungal susceptibility test method by MD (M27-A2) of oropharyngeal Candida albicans strains after 24h among some Egyptian haematological malignant patients.

The MD M27-A2 method revealed FZ resistance in 6 (16.2%) isolates while dose-depending susceptibility occurred in 5 (13.5%).

However, Enwuru et al., (9) informed that among 30 Candida albicans isolated from oropharyngeal HIV/AIDS patients, 26 (86.7%) were sensitive to FZ; 1 (3.3%) was S-DD and 3 (10%) were resistant. Wilheim et al., (27) reported that both, resistance (14.28%) and dose-depending susceptibility (4.76%) of esophageal candidiasis to FZ were considered high among immunocompromized patients.

In the present study, FCM technique, assayed by PI fluorescence emission, provides MD-comparable results for all 37 strains following a short period of incubation (4h).

It had been verified in other studies (21) that antifungal agents to work well with FCM and PI dye needs incubation time that produces clearly definable changes in the FCM density plot and allow for results to be obtained on the same working day. The alterations in the side scatter and forward scatter cytograms, indicative of the antifungal effect on the yeast cells, are also only minimally apparent with a shorter incubation time. The generation time of Candida is approximately 3 h (20), so it is understandable that the drug effects take at least a partial growth cycle to be detected.

We found mean channel fluorescence (MCF) to be a reliable parameter for all 37 strains tested. This is because FCM measures antibiotic-induced membrane damage. We used sodium deoxycholate to enhance diffusion of PI across the cell wall to pass through the damaged yeast cell membranes as recommended previously (21).

Most previous studies of FZ defined the parameters of MIC by FCM as the drug concentration that produced a 50% increase in MCF (11, 19). However, Joung et al. (12) demonstrated that a 50% increase in MCF might not be the best criterion for determining the MIC of FZ and recommended, a 30% increase in MCF was best correlated to the MD MIC under their test conditions that utilized sodium deoxycholate to enhance PI penetration in 8 h incubation.

For the 37 isolates tested, 89% of the FCM results were within the same dilution of the MD results, and 100% of the results were within 2 dilutions. Moreover, the FCM method produced an excellent level of agreement with M27-A. The overall agreement for the MICs between the two methods was 95.59% for FZ. The agreement between MD and FCM methods ranged from 96 to 99% by Chaturvedi et al.,(2).

The antifungal disk diffusion method (DD) shows simplicity and flexibility of testing making it a very appealing method for use in the clinical laboratory (18).

By using DD method, the majority of Candida strains (24/37) are susceptible to FZ and had a zone diameter above the breakpoint (≥19 mm), and these strains could safely be reported as susceptible. However, (2 / 37) susceptible strains, for which the MIC was 8 μg/ml, were be reported as one resistant and one as S-DD by the DD. Therefore, the detection of resistance by disk test correlates poorly with that by the reference MD M27-A2 method. We could say that interpretation of resistant cases by DD method should be taken cautiously. This is similar to a study by Matar et al., (14) who concluded that ≥90% of the isolates that tested resistant to FZ by an agar-based method were susceptible-dose dependent or resistant by the reference MD method. In our study, the agreement between the DD and MD methods was 81% better than that reported previously (17) as being 67%. The DD zone diameters are highly reproducible and correlate well with the MD method, making agar-based method a viable alternative to MD for susceptibility testing.

Considering that DD assays are simple to perform and inexpensive, they may be a useful tool in large-scale surveys of clinical isolates to identify population distribution patterns of FZ sensitivity of Candida albicans strains (8). FZ MICs should be determined for strains with zone diameters below the breakpoint (≤19 mm). The reason for confirmatory testing, as explained by Sandven (25), is twofold: to determine if isolates are resistant or S-DD, since the FZ disc test does not make this distinction, and to identify FZ-susceptible strains that are found to be falsely resistant by the disc test.

In conclusion, The FCM method using PI generally provided rapid (4h) and reproducible results instead of the 24 h required by broth MD. However, when the number of simultaneously tested samples is increased, this procedure becomes quite labor-intensive, which limits its use in routine laboratories. DD assay for FZ susceptibility testing is simple to perform and inexpensive. It may be a useful tool in large-scale surveys with taken cautiously the interpretation of resistant isolates by DD.

Submitted: December 07, 2010; Returned to authors for corrections: May 05, 2011; Approved: August 15, 2011.

*Corresponding Author. Mailing address: Lecturer of Clinical Pathology, Clinical Pathology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura University, Egypt.; Tel.: +20-10-8368989 Fax:+20-50-2248203.; E-mail: niveen197@mans.edu.eg

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    02 May 2012
  • Date of issue
    Mar 2012

History

  • Received
    07 Dec 2010
  • Accepted
    15 Aug 2011
  • Reviewed
    05 May 2011
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