Beyond Candida: Epidemiological Insights into Rare Yeast Fungaemia in Greece from a 15-Year Hospital-Based Study and Literature Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
- (i)
- Patients’ characteristics. Demographic data were available for the majority of the cases, with age reported in 39/64 episodes (61%) and sex in 38/64 episodes (59%). Among these patients, 63% (24/38) were male, with a median (range, IQR) age of 21 (0.03–76, 63) years. In particular, stratification by age group revealed that almost half of the episodes (46%, 18/39) occurred in pediatric patients, including 1 neonate (aged <28 days) and 8 infants (aged ≤1 year), while 18% (7/39) occurred in adults aged 18–59 years and 36% (14/39) in elderly individuals aged ≥60 years.
- (ii)
- Species. The most frequently isolated causative pathogen was S. cerevisiae, accounting for 31% (20/64) of episodes, followed by Rhodotorula mucilaginosa (formerly R. rubra) in 30% (19/64), Trichosporon asahii in 25% (16/64), Malassezia furfur in 6% (4/64), Magnusiomyces capitatus (previously known by various synonyms including Saprochaete capitata, Geotrichum capitatum, Blastoschizomyces capitatus, Trichosporon capitatum, or Dipodascus capitatus) in 3% (2/64), R. glutinis in 3% (2/64) and Moesziomyces aphidis (formerly Pseudozyma aphidis) in 2% (1/64) (Table 1 and Table S1). Species identification methods were reported for 38/64 (59%) isolates and comprised MALDI-TOF MS in 66% (25/38), conventional phenotypic and biochemical approaches in 26% (10/38), and molecular amplification with sequencing of the ITS region in 8% (3/38) (Supplementary Table S1).
- (iii)
- Antifungal susceptibility. Susceptibility testing was conducted in 58% (37/64) of reported cases, predominantly using gradient diffusion strips (78%, 29/37), while other commercial and reference broth microdilution methods were each applied in 11% (4/37) of tested isolates (Supplementary Table S1).
- (iv)
- Antifungal therapy and outcome. Data on antifungal treatment were available for a small proportion of patients (39%, 25/64). Breakthrough infections were documented in 8/25 episodes (32%), occurring predominantly (88%, 7/8) during administration of posaconazole (4/7) or fluconazole (3/7). Most cases (4/7) involved R. mucilaginosa, followed by T. asahii (2/7) and M. capitatus (1/7). The remaining T. asahii-related fungaemia was recorded in a patient who had been receiving anidulafungin for 17 days.
- (i)
- Incidence. A total of 29 episodes were attributed to rare yeasts, corresponding to an overall incidence rate of 3% (range: 0–9%). The estimated incidence density was 0.04 (range: 0–0.11) episodes per 1000 hospital admissions and 0.09 (range: 0–0.24) episodes per 10,000 patient days. Most episodes (76%, 22/29) occurred in patients admitted in internal medicine wards; surgical wards accounted for 17% (5/29) and ICUs for 7% (2/29). Rare yeast fungaemias were sporadically distributed throughout the study period, with no evidence of temporal or spatial clustering. The annual distribution was as follows: 1 case each in 2010, 2012 and 2020, 2 cases each in 2013, 2014 and 2015, 3 cases each in 2011 and 2012, 4 cases in 2017, and 5 cases each in 2018 and 2024 (Supplementary Table S2).
- (ii)
- Patients’ characteristics. Within the cohort, 62% (18/29) of patients were male, with a median (range, IQR) age of 69 (17–88, 18) years. Hematological malignancies and solid organ tumours were the most prevalent underlying conditions, accounting for 31% (9/29) and 24% (7/29) of cases, respectively. At diagnosis, all patients were febrile, and 62% (18/29) were neutropenic or immunosuppressed. Concomitant Gram-negative bacteraemia was recorded in two cases and mixed fungaemia with C. parapsilosis was observed in one case. Detailed information on predisposing factors was available for 73% (24/29) of patients, all of whom were receiving antibiotic therapy and had central venous catheters (CVCs). Additional common risk factors included parenteral nutrition (58%, 14/24), diabetes mellitus (29%, 7/24), invasive surgical procedures (21%, 5/24, of which 3/5 were abdominal) and prolonged ICU stay (12%, 3/24). Among patients with S. cerevisiae fungaemia, for whom relevant data were available, 62% (5/8) had been receiving probiotics containing S. cerevisiae var. boulardii (Table 1 and Table S2). The median (range, IQR) time from hospital admission to onset of the infection was 27 (5–152, 26) days.
- (iii)
- Biomarkers. Excluding patients with concomitant bacteraemia and candidaemia (n = 3), the median (range, IQR) C-reactive protein (CRP) level at the time of rare yeast-positive blood culture sampling was 88 (3–327, 85) mg/L, with most (92%) having > 10 mg/L, except two patients with 3.02–6.03 mg/L, both with R. mucilaginosa infection. Procalcitonin (PCT) values, available for 8/26 (31%) patients, showed a median (range, IQR) of 0.67 (0.13–1.27, 0.50) ng/mL, with most (62%) having > 0.5 ng/mL (three patients with S. cerevisiae infection and two patients with R. mucilaginosa), except three patients with 0.13 ng/mL (T. asahii), 0.29 ng/mL (T. asahii), and 0.45 ng/mL (R. mucilaginosa).
- (iv)
- Species. The median (range, IQR) time to blood culture positivity was 4 (1–8, 3) days. The most frequently isolated species were R. mucilaginosa (41%, 12/29), S. cerevisiae (31%, 9/29) and T. asahii (21%, 6/29), followed by single isolates of Apiotrichum loubieri (formerly Trichosporon loubieri) and M. capitatus (3.5% each) (Table 1 and Table S2). Confirmatory species identification and AFST were successfully performed for all isolates except two R. mucilaginosa and two S. cerevisiae, which had not been stored. M. capitatus was the only isolate identified by ITS sequencing, as neither Vitek 2 (yielding inconclusive or unidentified results) nor MALDI-TOF MS (score value 1.84; genus-level identification) could assign species-level identification (Supplementary Table S2). The concordance between Vitek 2 and MALDI-TOF MS was 96% (24/25), with A. loubieri being the only species misidentified by Vitek 2 as T. asahii (identified with good confidence level).
- (v)
- Antifungal susceptibility. S. cerevisiae exhibited low MICs for amphotericin B and echinocandins, and variable MICs for azoles, with voriconazole showing the highest in vitro activity. R. mucilaginosa displayed elevated MICs to echinocandins and fluconazole, moderate MICs to other azoles (voriconazole being the least active in vitro) and low MICs to amphotericin B. T. asahii exhibited high MICs to echinocandins and fluconazole, and moderate MICs to amphotericin B and other azoles, with voriconazole and isavuconazole demonstrating the highest in vitro activity.
- (vi)
- Antifungal therapy. Antifungal treatment data were available for 72% (21/29) of patients. At the time of fungaemia onset, one-third (33%, 7/21) were breakthrough infections occurring during treatment with anidulafungin (three patients; administered for 9–23 days), fluconazole (two patients; 11–25 days) and isavuconazole (two patients; 14–22 days). These infections were documented with R. mucilaginosa (n = 3; two during fluconazole and one during isavuconazole therapy), as well as in single cases of M. capitatus, S. cerevisiae and T. asahii (each during anidulafungin therapy), and A. loubieri (during isavuconazole therapy).
- (vii)
- Mortality. The median (range, IQR) duration of hospitalization following the collection of the rare yeast-positive blood culture was 17 (2–106, 22) days, while among patients who succumbed, the median (range, IQR) time from culture collection to death was 11 (2–106, 12) days. The overall crude mortality rate was 62% (18/29), comprising 61% (11/18) in the neutropenic/immunosuppressed subgroup and 64% (7/11) in the non-neutropenic/non-immunosuppressed subgroup. Among those who received antifungal therapy, mortality declined to 53% (9/17; 40% for S. cerevisiae, 43% for R. mucilaginosa, and 75% for T. asahii) (Table 1 and Table S2).
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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| Literature Review | Attikon Hospital | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of cases | 64 | 29 | |
| Patients’ characteristics * | |||
| Sex | Male | 24/38 (63%) | 18/29 (62%) |
| Female | 14/38 (37%) | 11/29 (38%) | |
| Age (years) (median (range, IQR)) | 21 (0.03–76, 63) | 50 (18–83, 27) | |
| Underlying condition | Hematological malignancy | 13/39 (33%) | 9/29 (31%) |
| Solid organ tumour | 6/39 (15%) | 7/29 (24%) | |
| Other characteristics | Neutropenia/Immunosuppression | 6/14 (43%) | 18/29 (62%) |
| Concomitant Gram-negative bacteraemia | 7/14 (50%) | 2/29 (7%) | |
| Risk factors * | Antibiotic therapy | 14/14 (100%) | 24/24 (100%) |
| Central/Peripheral venous catheter | 13/14 (93%) | 24/24 (100%) | |
| Parenteral nutrition | 3/14 (21%) | 14/24 (58%) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 1/14 (7%) | 7/24 (29%) | |
| Invasive surgical procedure | 2/14 (14%) | 5/24 (21%) | |
| Causative pathogen | R. mucilaginosa | 19/64 (30%) | 12/29 (41%) |
| S. cerevisiae | 20/64 (31%) | 9/29 (31%) | |
| T. asahii | 16/64 (25%) | 6/29 (21%) | |
| Other | 9/64 (14%) | 2/29 (7%) | |
| Breakthrough infection # | Total number | 8/25 (32%) | 7/21 (33%) |
| AFG | 1/8 (12%) | 3/7 (42%) | |
| FLC | 3/8 (38%) | 2/7 (29%) | |
| ISA | - | 2/7 (29%) | |
| PSC | 4/8 (50%) | - | |
| Antifungal therapy # | LAMB | 6/25 (24%) | 4/21 (19%) |
| AMB | 2/25 (8%) | - | |
| Echinocandins | 1/25 (4%) | 5/21 (23.5%) | |
| Azole | 8/25 (32%) | 1/21 (5%) | |
| LAMB + azole ^ | 2/25 (8%) | 5/21 (23.5%) | |
| LAMB + echinocandin ^ | - | 1/21 (5%) | |
| Azole + echinocandin ^ | 2/25 (8%) | 1/21 (5%) | |
| No therapy | 4/25 (16%) | 4/21 (19%) | |
| Crude within hospital mortality # | Prior to blood culture results | 3/25 (12%) | 4/21 (19%) |
| Among those who received antifungal therapy | 4/21 (19%) | 9/17 (53%) | |
| Literature Review (GDS/CLSI ECVs) | Attikon Hospital (EUCAST BMD/ECOFFs) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R. mucilaginosa (n = 4) | S. cerevisiae (n = 8) | T. asahii (n = 10) | R. mucilaginosa (n = 10) | S. cerevisiae (n = 7) | T. asahii (n = 6) | |
| Amphotericin B | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | 2 (0.5–2) | 0.25 (0.016–0.5) | 0.5 (0.06–> 32) | 0.25 (0.25–0.5) | 0.25 (0.25–0.5) | 1 (1–1) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 3 (30%) | [0 (0%)] b | 0 (0%) | - a |
| Anidulafungin | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | >32 (>32–>32) | 0.03 (0.008–0.125) | >32 (>32–>32) | >8 (4–> 8) | 0.125 (0.06–0.125) | 4 (4–>8) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | - a | 0 (0%) | - a | - a | 0 (0%) | - a |
| Micafungin | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | >32 (>32–>32) | 0.06 (0.016–0.25) | >32 (>32–>32) | >8 (4–>8) | 0.125 (0.06–0.125) | >8 (4–>8) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | - a | 0 (0%) | - a | NA | 0 (0%) | NA |
| Caspofungin | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | >32 (>32–>32) | 0.25 (0.06–0.25) | >32 (>32–>32) | >8 (>8–>8) | 0.5 (0.5–1) | >8 (4–>8) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | - a | 0 (0%) | - a | NA | NA | NA |
| Fluconazole | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | >256 (>256–>256) | 16 (4–>256) | 2 (1–16) | >64 (>64–>64) | 16 (8–16) | 16 (8–16) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | - a | 1 (12%) | 1 (10%) | - a | (0 (0%)) b | (0 (0%)) b |
| Voriconazole | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | 2 (1–2) | 0.25 (0.03–0.5) | 0.06 (0.03–0.125) | 2 (1–4) | 0.125 (0.125–0.125) | 0.125 (0.06–0.25) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | NA | - a | (0 (0%)) b | NA |
| Posaconazole | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | 0.25 (0.25–0.5) | 2 (1–8) | 0.5 (0.25–1) | 1 (0.5–2) | 1 (0.25–1) | 0.5 (0.25–0.5) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | 0 (0%) | 3 (38%) | 0 (0%) | NA | NA | NA |
| Itraconazole | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | 1 (1–1) | 4 (4–>32) | 1 (0.5–4) | 0.5 (0.5–1) | 8 (0.5–-> 8) | 0.5 (0.125–0.5) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | 0 (0%) | 6 (75%) | 3 (30%) | NA | 4 (57%) | NA |
| Isavuconazole | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | 0.5 (0.25–0.5) | 0.125 (0.03–0.5) | 0.125 (0.03–0.5) | 0.5 (0.25–2) | 1 (0.125–1) | 0.125 (0.06–0.5) |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| 5-Flucytosine | ||||||
| Median (range) MIC (mg/L) | 0.06 (0.03–0.06) | 0.06 (0.008–1) | 16 (0.25–>32) | NP | NP | NP |
| Number (%) of non-WT isolates | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
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Siopi, M.; Mitsopoulos, D.; Alevra, A.; Vargiami, M.; Pournaras, S.; Meletiadis, J. Beyond Candida: Epidemiological Insights into Rare Yeast Fungaemia in Greece from a 15-Year Hospital-Based Study and Literature Review. J. Fungi 2026, 12, 187. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof12030187
Siopi M, Mitsopoulos D, Alevra A, Vargiami M, Pournaras S, Meletiadis J. Beyond Candida: Epidemiological Insights into Rare Yeast Fungaemia in Greece from a 15-Year Hospital-Based Study and Literature Review. Journal of Fungi. 2026; 12(3):187. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof12030187
Chicago/Turabian StyleSiopi, Maria, Dimitrios Mitsopoulos, Angeliki Alevra, Margarita Vargiami, Spyros Pournaras, and Joseph Meletiadis. 2026. "Beyond Candida: Epidemiological Insights into Rare Yeast Fungaemia in Greece from a 15-Year Hospital-Based Study and Literature Review" Journal of Fungi 12, no. 3: 187. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof12030187
APA StyleSiopi, M., Mitsopoulos, D., Alevra, A., Vargiami, M., Pournaras, S., & Meletiadis, J. (2026). Beyond Candida: Epidemiological Insights into Rare Yeast Fungaemia in Greece from a 15-Year Hospital-Based Study and Literature Review. Journal of Fungi, 12(3), 187. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof12030187

