Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10027748 | International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The activity of voriconazole was tested in vitro against 1996 clinical yeast isolates collected in 20 Italian microbiology laboratories. Voriconazole susceptibility testing was carried out with the broth microdilution (NCCLS M27-A2), Etest and disk diffusion methods. The minimum inhibitory concentrations at which 90% of the isolates were inhibited (MIC90) obtained with the NCCLS method were 0.03Â mg/L for Candida albicans, 0.5Â mg/L for Candida non-albicans and 0.25Â mg/L for other genera; those obtained with Etesting were, respectively, 0.032Â mg/L, 0.125Â mg/L and 0.125Â mg/L. With the disk diffusion method, the majority of isolates (92.3%) showed inhibition zone diameters between 21Â mm and 40Â mm. Using a tentative MIC cut-off of 1Â mg/L as indicative of in vitro susceptibility, 98.1% of the isolates tested in our study would be classified as susceptible, and only 28 (1.4%) of the isolates, with MICs higher than 2Â mg/L, would be classified as resistant to the drug. Our findings confirm the broad-spectrum in vitro activity of voriconazole against yeasts, including Candida species that are generally less susceptible to other azoles.
Keywords
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Immunology and Microbiology
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Authors
Giulia Morace, Luciano Polonelli, for the GISIA Group for the GISIA Group,