Author/Authors :
راد، مريم نويسنده , , آيت االهي موسوي، سيد امين نويسنده 2 Associate Professor, Department of Medical Mycology and Parasitology, School of Medicine, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran. Ayatollahi Mousavi, Seyyed Amin , كاكويي، شهلا نويسنده مركز تحقيقات بيماريهاي دهان و دندان-دانشكده دندانپزشكي دانشگاه علوم پزشكي كرمان Kakooee, SH , بهادر، مريم نويسنده , , برنا، رويا نويسنده , , لشكري زاده، نازيلا نويسنده Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran. Lashkarizadeh, Nazila
Abstract :
BACKGROUND: Oropharyngeal candidiasis is a common infection in patient receiving radiotherapy for head and neck
cancer. Accurate and rapid identification of candida species is very important in clinical laboratory, because the
incidence of candidiasis continues to rise after radiotherapy. The genus Candida has about 154 species that show
different level of resistance to antifungal drugs and have high degree of phenotypic similarity. The aim of this study was
to investigate oral yeast colonization and infection and resistance to antifungal drugs in these patients.
METHODS: Thirty patients receiving a 6-week course of radiation therapy for treatment of head and neck cancer at the
Oncology Unit in Shafa Hospital, in 2008, were enrolled in the study. Specimens from patients were cultured weekly
for Candida. All isolates were plated on CHROM agar and RPMI-based medium. They were subcultured and submitted
for antifungal susceptibility testing (nystatin, fluconazole, clotrimazole and ketoconazole) and molecular typing.
RESULTS: Infection (clinical and microbiological evidence) occurred in 50% of the patients and Candida colonization
(only microbiological evidence) occurred in 70% of subjects in the first week. Candida albicans alone was isolated in
94.9% of patient visits with positive cultures. Candida tropicalis was isolated from 5.1% of patient visits with positive
cultures. All isolates were susceptible to nystatin, but did not respond to the other antifungal drugs
CONCLUSIONS: The irradiation-induced changes of the intraoral environment such as xerostomia lead to increased
intraoral colonization by Candida species. All yeast isolates were susceptible to nystatin. Thus prophylactic therapy
with nystatin should be considered for these patients.