Publication | Open Access
<i>Rhizopus microsporus</i> Infections Associated with Surgical Procedures, Argentina, 2006–2014
14
Citations
32
References
2020
Year
Diagnostic MycologyParasitic DiseasePathogenic MicrobiologyMolecular EpidemiologySurgical ProceduresClinical MycologySurgeryGenomicsHigh Throughput SequencingInfection ControlParasitologyHealth SciencesInfectious Disease EpidemiologyParasitic ProtozoaSequencingClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyWhole-genome SequencingMolecular Diagnostic TechniquesRhizopus SppMicrobial DiseaseEmerging Infectious DiseasesNext-generation SequencingMicrobiologyMost IsolatesMedicine
Rhizopus spp. fungi are ubiquitous in the environment and a rare but substantial cause of infection in immunosuppressed persons and surgery patients. During 2005-2017, an abnormally high number of Rhizopus infections in surgery patients, with no apparent epidemiologic links, were reported in Argentina. To determine the likelihood of a common source of the cluster, we performed whole-genome sequencing on samples collected during 2006-2014. Most isolates were separated by >60 single-nucleotide polymorphisms, and we found no evidence for recombination or nonneutral mutation accumulation; these findings do not support common source or patient-to-patient transmission. Assembled genomes of most isolates were ≈25 Mbp, and multiple isolates had substantially larger assembled genomes (43-51 Mbp), indicative of infections with strain types that underwent genome expansion. Whole-genome sequencing has become an essential tool for studying epidemiology of fungal infections. Less discriminatory techniques may miss true relationships, possibly resulting in inappropriate attribution of point source.
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