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07 September 2011PLoS Pathogens
Cryptococcus infections misdiagnosed in many AIDS patients

Most AIDS patients, when diagnosed with a fungal infection known simply as cryptococcosis, are assumed to have an infection with Cryptococcus neoformans, but a recent study from Duke University Medical Center suggests that a sibling species, Cryptococcus gattii, is a more common cause than was previously known. The study was published in PLoS Pathogens.
The study emphasizes that health professionals need more careful recording of the cryptococcal species to understand different clinical courses and possibly to change treatment strategies. Researchers at Duke University Medical Center discovered that in the Los Angeles area, over 12 percent of AIDS patients diagnosed with Crypotococcus were infected with C. gattii, much higher than earlier studies, suggesting only about 1 percent have C. gattii. The researchers based these figures on molecular testing of fungal DNA barcodes.
This discovery comes at the same time as a C. gattii outbreak is expanding in the Pacific Northwest, spreading southward from Vancouver, British Columbia, through Washington, Oregon, and into northern California. Molecular testing is helping both health officials and scientists gain a picture of how a formerly tropical fungus could find new territory, in temperate climates, for infection.
Because cryptococcal strains are responsible for over 620,000 deaths annually and responsible for one-third of all AIDS deaths, this species distinction may be of public health importance. "There may be an unrecognized health burden in AIDS patients attributable to C. gattii rather than C. neoformans," said Joseph Heitman, M.D., Ph.D., senior author of the study and chair of the Duke Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology.
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Byrnes EJ III, Li W, Ren P, Lewit Y, Voelz K, et al. (2011) A Diverse Population of Cryptococcus gattii Molecular Type VGIII in Southern Californian HIV/AIDS Patients. PLoS Pathog 7(9). doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002205



