Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia

Fungal infections (mycoses) are likely to occur more frequently as ever-increasingly sophisticated healthcare systems create greater risk factors. There is a paucity of systematic data on the incidence and prevalence of human fungal infections in Malaysia. We conducted a comprehensive study to estim...

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Main Authors: Velayuthan, Rukumani Devi, Samudi, Chandramathi, Singh, Harvinder Kaur Lakhbeer, Ng, Kee Peng, Shankar, Esaki Muthu, Denning, David William
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Published: MDPI 2018
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/20426/
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof4010038
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spelling my.um.eprints.204262019-02-21T04:20:42Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/20426/ Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia Velayuthan, Rukumani Devi Samudi, Chandramathi Singh, Harvinder Kaur Lakhbeer Ng, Kee Peng Shankar, Esaki Muthu Denning, David William R Medicine Fungal infections (mycoses) are likely to occur more frequently as ever-increasingly sophisticated healthcare systems create greater risk factors. There is a paucity of systematic data on the incidence and prevalence of human fungal infections in Malaysia. We conducted a comprehensive study to estimate the burden of serious fungal infections in Malaysia. Our study showed that recurrent vaginal candidiasis (>4 episodes/year) was the most common of all cases with a diagnosis of candidiasis (n = 501,138). Oesophageal candidiasis (n = 5850) was most predominant among individuals with HIV infection. Candidemia incidence (n = 1533) was estimated in hospitalized individuals, some receiving treatment for cancer (n = 1073), and was detected also in individuals admitted to intensive care units (ICU) (n = 460). In adults with asthma, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) was the second most common respiratory mycoses noticed (n = 30,062) along with severe asthma with fungal sensitization (n = 39,628). Invasive aspergillosis was estimated in 184 cases undergoing anti-cancer treatment and 834 ICU cases. Cryptococcal meningitis was diagnosed in 700 subjects with HIV/AIDS and Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonitis (PCP) in 1286 subjects with underlying HIV disease. The present study indicates that at least 590,214 of the Malaysian population (1.93%) is affected by a serious fungal infection annually. This problem is serious enough to warrant the further epidemiological studies to estimate the burden of human fungal infections in Malaysia. MDPI 2018 Article PeerReviewed Velayuthan, Rukumani Devi and Samudi, Chandramathi and Singh, Harvinder Kaur Lakhbeer and Ng, Kee Peng and Shankar, Esaki Muthu and Denning, David William (2018) Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia. Journal of Fungi, 4 (1). p. 38. ISSN 2309-608X https://doi.org/10.3390/jof4010038 doi:10.3390/jof4010038
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Velayuthan, Rukumani Devi
Samudi, Chandramathi
Singh, Harvinder Kaur Lakhbeer
Ng, Kee Peng
Shankar, Esaki Muthu
Denning, David William
Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia
description Fungal infections (mycoses) are likely to occur more frequently as ever-increasingly sophisticated healthcare systems create greater risk factors. There is a paucity of systematic data on the incidence and prevalence of human fungal infections in Malaysia. We conducted a comprehensive study to estimate the burden of serious fungal infections in Malaysia. Our study showed that recurrent vaginal candidiasis (>4 episodes/year) was the most common of all cases with a diagnosis of candidiasis (n = 501,138). Oesophageal candidiasis (n = 5850) was most predominant among individuals with HIV infection. Candidemia incidence (n = 1533) was estimated in hospitalized individuals, some receiving treatment for cancer (n = 1073), and was detected also in individuals admitted to intensive care units (ICU) (n = 460). In adults with asthma, allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) was the second most common respiratory mycoses noticed (n = 30,062) along with severe asthma with fungal sensitization (n = 39,628). Invasive aspergillosis was estimated in 184 cases undergoing anti-cancer treatment and 834 ICU cases. Cryptococcal meningitis was diagnosed in 700 subjects with HIV/AIDS and Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonitis (PCP) in 1286 subjects with underlying HIV disease. The present study indicates that at least 590,214 of the Malaysian population (1.93%) is affected by a serious fungal infection annually. This problem is serious enough to warrant the further epidemiological studies to estimate the burden of human fungal infections in Malaysia.
format Article
author Velayuthan, Rukumani Devi
Samudi, Chandramathi
Singh, Harvinder Kaur Lakhbeer
Ng, Kee Peng
Shankar, Esaki Muthu
Denning, David William
author_facet Velayuthan, Rukumani Devi
Samudi, Chandramathi
Singh, Harvinder Kaur Lakhbeer
Ng, Kee Peng
Shankar, Esaki Muthu
Denning, David William
author_sort Velayuthan, Rukumani Devi
title Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia
title_short Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia
title_full Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia
title_fullStr Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of the Burden of Serious Human Fungal Infections in Malaysia
title_sort estimation of the burden of serious human fungal infections in malaysia
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/20426/
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof4010038
_version_ 1643691274948050944
score 13.211869