Recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis: The causative agents, clinical signs and susceptibility to fluconazole in gonabad city, northeast iran

Date

Authors

Minooeianhaghighi, Mohammad Hassan
Sehatpour, Marziyeh
Zarrinfar, Hossein
Sen, Tanuka

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers

Abstract

Abstract: Background: Recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC) is the second most common cause of genital tract infection in females. Excessive use of fluconazole and other azoles is likely to cause the emergence of the resistant species of Candida. Objective: The purpose of this research was to identify Candida isolates from RVVC and the antifungal effect of fluconazole against them. Methods: In this study, 152 patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis were evaluated for the RVVC form. The Candida isolates were purified using CHROMagar Candida and identified based on the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS1-ITS2 rDNA) sequence analysis by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) method. The antifungal susceptibility of C. albicans isolates against fluconazole was determined according to document M27-A3. Results: Out of 152 patients, 20 cases (13.2%) were identified as recurrent form. The frequencies of the Candida species among the patients with RVVC were C. albicans (n = 16, 80%), C. parapsilosis (n = 3, 15%) and C. tropicalis (n = 1, 5%). The most common clinical sign was vaginal discharge (60%). The mean minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and minimum fungicidal concentration (MFC) of fluconazole against Candida isolates were 32 µg/mL and 64 µg/mL, respectively. Conclusion: C. albicans was the dominant cause of RVVC. The Candida isolates showed relatively high resistance to fluconazole in vitro. Vaginal discharge was the most common clinical sign among patients with RVVC. Keywords: Recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, gonabad, predisposing factors, fluconazole, PCR-RFLP.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Current Women's Health Reviews

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31