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Article

COVID-19 Associated Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CAPA): Hospital or Home Environment as a Source of Life-Threatening Aspergillus fumigatus Infection?

by
Teresa Peláez-García de la Rasilla
1,2,*,
Irene González-Jiménez
3,
Andrea Fernández-Arroyo
4,
Alejandra Roldán
3,
Jose Luis Carretero-Ares
4,
Marta García-Clemente
5,*,
Mauricio Telenti-Asensio
6,
Emilio García-Prieto
7,
Mar Martínez-Suarez
4,
Fernando Vázquez-Valdés
1,2,
Santiago Melón-García
1,2,
Luis Caminal-Montero
6,
Inmaculada Fernández-Simón
7,
Emilia Mellado
3,8 and
María Luisa Sánchez-Núñez
9,† on behalf of the HUCAPA Group
1
Microbiology Department, Central University Hospital of Asturias (HUCA), 33011 Oviedo, Spain
2
Biosanitary Foundation for Research in the Principality of Asturias (FINBA), 33011 Oviedo, Spain
3
Mycology Reference Laboratory, National Center for Microbiology, Carlos III Health Institute (ISCIII), 28220 Madrid, Spain
4
Preventive Medicine Department, Central University Hospital of Asturias (HUCA), 33011 Oviedo, Spain
5
Pneumology Department, Central University Hospital of Asturias (HUCA), 33011 Oviedo, Spain
6
Infectious Diseases Department, Central University Hospital of Asturias (HUCA), 33011 Oviedo, Spain
7
Intensive Care Unit Department, Central University Hospital of Asturias (HUCA), 33011 Oviedo, Spain
8
Spanish Network for Research and Infectious Diseases (REIPI RD16/CIII/004/0003), 28220 Madrid, Spain
9
Hospital Direction, HUCA, 33011 Oviedo, Spain
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Membership of the HUCAPA Group is provided in the back matter.
J. Fungi 2022, 8(3), 316; https://doi.org/10.3390/jof8030316
Submission received: 22 February 2022 / Revised: 14 March 2022 / Accepted: 16 March 2022 / Published: 19 March 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fungal Infections and COVID-19)

Abstract

:
Most cases of invasive aspergillosis are caused by Aspergillus fumigatus, whose conidia are ubiquitous in the environment. Additionally, in indoor environments, such as houses or hospitals, conidia are frequently detected too. Hospital-acquired aspergillosis is usually associated with airborne fungal contamination of the hospital air, especially after building construction events. A. fumigatus strain typing can fulfill many needs both in clinical settings and otherwise. The high incidence of aspergillosis in COVID patients from our hospital, made us wonder if they were hospital-acquired aspergillosis. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the hospital environment was the source of aspergillosis infection in CAPA patients, admitted to the Hospital Universitario Central de Asturias, during the first and second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, or whether it was community-acquired aspergillosis before admission. During 2020, sixty-nine A. fumigatus strains were collected for this study: 59 were clinical isolates from 28 COVID-19 patients, and 10 strains were environmentally isolated from seven hospital rooms and intensive care units. A diagnosis of pulmonary aspergillosis was based on the ECCM/ISHAM criteria. Strains were genotyped by PCR amplification and sequencing of a panel of four hypervariable tandem repeats within exons of surface protein coding genes (TRESPERG). A total of seven genotypes among the 10 environmental strains and 28 genotypes among the 59 clinical strains were identified. Genotyping revealed that only one environmental A. fumigatus from UCI 5 (box 54) isolated in October (30 October 2020) and one A. fumigatus isolated from a COVID-19 patient admitted in Pneumology (Room 532-B) in November (24 November 2020) had the same genotype, but there was a significant difference in time and location. There was also no relationship in time and location between similar A. fumigatus genotypes of patients. The global A. fumigatus, environmental and clinical isolates, showed a wide diversity of genotypes. To our knowledge, this is the first study monitoring and genotyping A. fumigatus isolates obtained from hospital air and COVID-19 patients, admitted with aspergillosis, during one year. Our work shows that patients do not acquire A. fumigatus in the hospital. This proves that COVID-associated aspergillosis in our hospital is not a nosocomial infection, but supports the hypothesis of “community aspergillosis” acquisition outside the hospital, having the home environment (pandemic period at home) as the main suspected focus of infection.

1. Introduction

Exposure to some fungal species, such as Aspergillus fumigatus, has been associated with opportunistic invasive fungal infections, a significant cause of mortality and morbidity in patients with severe neutropenia or immunosuppression. In these immunosuppressed patients, invasive aspergillosis (IA) is easy to suspect because given the typical and well-described risk factors and forms of presentation [1]. In recent years, several case series have been published about patients with severe influenza virus disease and without other risk factors who develop IA. These are generally patients with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome, in which incidence of IA depends on geographical differences, vaccination rates, and diagnostic tests used, varying from 11 to 28% [2,3,4]. More recently, in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic, an increasing number of patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia and respiratory distress have been diagnosed with IA [2]. According to the different studies published, CAPA prevalence is highly variable, ranging between 3 and 33% [5,6,7,8,9]. These differences can be attributed to different thresholds for clinical evaluation, diagnostic methods, and differences in criteria for CAPA definition [6,10]. Prattes et al. [5], in a multicenter study, described a median prevalence of 10.7%. Our group has published a recent study with a prevalence of 11.7% during the first and second waves of pandemic COVID-19 [11]. This entity has been reported to significantly increase the severity of the COVID-19 with worse outcome and it has an important impact on the prognosis of the SARS-CoV-2 infection [2,6,7,8,9], so an early diagnosis can influence survival.
The growing number of cases has led to the belief in the possibility of nosocomial transmission of IA. Nosocomial acquisition of invasive aspergillosis has been proved in epidemic situations such as construction and renovation works, and also in non-epidemic cases [1,4,12,13,14], with studies showing how environment concentrations of Aspergillus and other fungi can be correlated with the presence of IA [1,14]. For this reason, during hospitalization, severely immunocompromised patients are believed to be at high risk of IA and, therefore, should receive care in units with rooms equipped with high-efficiency filters, laminar flow, and positive pressure [15] while maintaining good air quality in hospitals also contributes significantly to reducing the incidence of these Aspergillus infections [16]. However, the presence of filamentous fungi in the external environment has also been reported to have a significant impact on the disease [17,18], and therefore the influence of external isolates, not related to hospital nosocomial infections, as a source of IA has raised interest.
Our hospital saw a rapid increase of IA in patients with COVID-19 (CAPA) during the first and second waves of the pandemic, which led to an active search for cases and an interest to discover whether there was an element of nosocomial transmission to these infections [11]. Different publications have reported different incidences of CAPA among hospitalized patients [5,6,7,8,9], and none of them have been able to differentiate nosocomial and community infections, which is important for case investigation and infection control since hospital-acquired infections require adequate control measures to prevent subsequent cases. However, it is not easy to find an association between a hospital stay and the appearance of IA since it depends on the timing and the biological possibility. Therefore, epidemiological criteria must be assessed, as well as the time between admission and the onset of symptoms and microbiological criteria.
It is also important to bear in mind that while it is already difficult to establish a nosocomial origin in the case of common bacterial pathogens, it is even more complicated in the case of Aspergillus, in which patients have underlying conditions that lead to severe immunosuppression that puts them at higher risk of both community and hospital-acquired infections [19]. It should also be noted that IA incubation is influenced by individual differences and environmental determinants, including the severity of immunosuppression and air quality. Knowing better the early events related to IA will help prevent this disease, for which prognosis continues to be poor.
The purpose of our study was to evaluate the source of infection in CAPA patients admitted to Hospital Universitario Central de Asturias during the first and second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, analyzing the distribution of Aspergillus spp. species among the samples of patients diagnosed with CAPA and hospital environmental isolates and carrying out the genotyping of the A. fumigatus isolates, to assess whether the aspergillosis was hospital or community-acquired.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Design

A prospective study was conducted at a tertiary university hospital in Asturias (Spain) during the COVID-19 pandemic between 1 January and 31 December 2020. Our institution is a large teaching hospital attending a population of 1,000,000 inhabitants. All the 3 intensive care units have positive pressure and HEPA filters. Patients in the ICUs are followed up by a team of specialized intensivists, anesthetists, pneumologists, and cardiovascular surgeons. Microbiologists, and infectious disease and preventive specialists perform daily rounds to collaborate in diagnosing and treating infectious complications and implementing preventive measures (HUCAPA Group).
The study was conducted among 300 patients tested for COVID-19 infection who were admitted to the hospital at ICU during the first and second waves (March–May 2020 and October–December 2020).
A diagnosis of COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA) was defined based on the 2020 European Confederation of Medical Mycology/International Society for Human and Animal Mycology (ECCM/ISHAM) [20] consensus criteria, and according to these criteria, patients were classified as proven CAPA, probable CAPA, possible CAPA or no evidence of CAPA. CAPA diagnosis was defined as the earliest date when a diagnostic feature was identified.
The study was in accordance with the Helsinki declaration and national ethical standards. The hospital research ethics committee approved the study protocol.

2.2. Microbiology Data Collection

Starting in January 2020, institutional recommendations were to screen patients in ICUs for fungal infections by means of:
1. Fungal cultures from respiratory samples on Sabouraud dextrose agar plates (BioMerieux, Mercy, L’Etoile, France). Fungus identification was performed by a matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry instrument (Bruker, Madrid, Spain), following the manufacturer’s instructions.
2. The two commercially manufactured lateral flow devices (LFDs) (AspLFD, OLM Diagnostics, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK) and Lateral Flow Assays (LFAs) (IMMY sona Aspergillus Galactomannan Lateral Flow Assay, IMMY, Norman, OK, USA) tests, with a visual reader that provides a semiquantitative reading and removes subjectivity when interpreting results.
3. Quantitative real-time PCR for Aspergillus genus as follows: DNA extraction for PCR analysis was performed on an ELITe InGenius automated platform as well as RT-PCR using the Aspergillus spp. ELITe MGB kit (Elitegroup, Palex, Barcelona, Spain). The DNA was extracted from a 1-mL volume of BAL fluid and was eluted in a 200-µL saline solution before DNA amplification in the same platform. RT-PCR for the Aspergillus genus was performed by an Aspergillus spp. ELITe MGB kit, which was CE-in vitro diagnostic (CE-IVD) validated on a diverse range of sample types. The target region was the ribosomal DNA18S (rDNA18S), and the human B-globin gene was used as an internal standard. The fungal DNA copy number was expressed as copies/mL in relation to a rDNA18s standard curve.
To elucidate whether CAPA patients acquired aspergillosis in the community or the hospital, we looked for the presence of Aspergillus in the first respiratory sample obtained from the COVID patient, even if they were not yet in the ICU. In several available patients, we even perform Aspergillus PCR on the same sample used for the diagnosis of COVID.
4. GM testing was performed using Platelia™ Aspergillus (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Madrid, Spain) with a cut-off value of ≥0.5 in serum and ≥1.0 in BAL or ≥4 in tracheal and bronchial aspirates.
5. Detection of 1,3-β-d-glucan (βDG) in serum was performed with the Wako β-glucan test (Fujifilm Wako Pure Chemical Corporation, Vircell Microbiologists, Granada, Spain). A cut-off value of 7 pg/mL was used.

2.3. Antifungal Drugs Susceptibility Testing

Antifungal susceptibility testing (AFST) was performed following the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) broth microdilution reference method 9.3.1 [21]. Antifungals used were amphotericin B (Sigma-Aldrich Química, Madrid, Spain) and the azoles itraconazole (Janssen Pharmaceutica, Madrid, Spain), voriconazole (Pfizer SA, Madrid, Spain), posaconazole (Schering-Plough Research Institute, Kenilworth, NJ, USA), and isavuconazole (Basilea Pharmaceutica, Basel, Switzerland). The final concentrations tested ranged from 0.03 to 16 mg/L for amphotericin B and 0.015 to 8 mg/L for the four azoles. A. flavus ATCC 204304 and A. fumigatus ATCC 204305 were used as quality control strains in all tests performed. Minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) were visually read after 24 and 48 h of incubation at 37 °C in a humid atmosphere. MICs were performed at least twice for each isolate. Clinical breakpoints for interpreting AFST results established by EUCAST [22] were used for classifying the A. fumigatus strains as susceptible or resistant.

2.4. Environmental Surveillance

Our local surveillance program consists of monthly environmental air sampling in operating rooms, ICUs, and high risks units, including the hematology (adult and pediatric) units and the transplantation units (heart, kidney, and liver) for quantitative and qualitative identification of filamentous fungi. Additional samples were also obtained when a suspicious case of Aspergillus infection was detected.
The distance between the west walls of UCI 1 and the east walls of UCI 4 is 230 m. All ICUs are located at level +1, with the exception of ICU 9, which was located at level −1.
All the Units in the Critical Areas (2 IPSRU and 9 ICUs) and all the Operating Rooms have independent and double air ducts. All of these double-ducted facilities have been under negative pressure (−15 to −5 Pa) since the start of the SARS-CoV2 pandemic (Figure 1).
During the study period, the attending physicians worked independently in each intensive care unit.
Volumetric air samples from environmental rooms and intensive care units were obtained using a volumetric sampler (Merck Air Sampler MAS100) as previously described [23].
Sealed Sabouraud-dextrose irradiated plates were incubated at 30 °C for 5 days. The plates were examined daily to check for fungal growth. Colonies of A. fumigatus growing on the plates were isolated, identified and stored.

2.5. Aspergillus fumigatus Strains

In this study, a total of 43 A. fumigatus strains were analyzed, 35 clinical and 8 environmental isolates. Strains identification was confirmed by amplification and sequencing of the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 rDNA regions and a portion of the β-tubulin gene [24].

2.5.1. Cyp51A Amplification, PCR Conditions and Sequencing

For DNA extraction, conidia from each strain were cultured in glucose-yeast extractpeptone (GYEP) liquid medium (0.3% yeast extract, 1% peptone; Difco, Soria Melguizo, Madrid, Spain) with 2% glucose (Sigma-Aldrich Química, Madrid, Spain) for 24 h at 37 °C. After mechanical disruption of the mycelium by vortex-mixing with glass beads, genomic DNA of isolates was extracted using the phenol-chloroform method [25,26]. The full coding sequence of cyp51A including its promoter was amplified and sequenced. To exclude the possibility that any change identified in the sequences was due to PCR-induced errors, each isolate was independently analyzed twice. PCR reaction mixtures contained 0.5 µM of each primer, 0.2 µM of deoxynucleoside triphosphate (Roche, Madrid, Spain), 5 µL of PCR 10× buffer, 2 mM of MgCl2, DMSO 5.2%, 2.5 U of Taq DNA polymerase (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA), and 100–200 ng of DNA in a final volume of 50 µL. A DNA 1-kb molecular ladder (Promega, Madrid, Spain) was used for all electrophoresis analyses. Samples were amplified in a GeneAmp PCR System 9700 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). The parameters used were 1 cycle of 5 min at 94 °C and then 35 cycles of 30 s at 94 °C, 45 s at 56 °C for cyp51A promoter and 58 °C for cyp51A gene, and 2 min at 72 °C, followed by a 1 final cycle of 5 min at 72 °C. The amplified products were purified using IllustraExoProStar 1–step (GE Healthcare Life Science, Buckinghamshire, UK), and both strands were sequenced with the Big-Dye terminator cycle sequencing kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) following the manufacturer’s instructions. All gene sequences were edited and assembled using the Lasergene software package (DNAStar Inc., Madison, WI, USA). Primers used to amplify and sequence cyp51A and its promoter have been previously described [27].

2.5.2. Strains Genotyping

All of the strains included in this study were genotyped following the previously described typing method TRESPERG [28,29]. Four markers were used: (i) Afu2g05150 encoding an MP-2 antigenic galactomannan protein (MP2); (ii) Afu6g14090 encoding a hypothetical protein with a CFEM domain (CFEM); (iii) Afu3g08990 encoding a cell surface protein A (CSP) and (iv) Afu1g07140 (ERG), which encodes a putative C-24 (28) sterol reductase. The combination of the genotypes obtained with each marker has a discriminatory value (D) of 0.9972 using the Simpson index [30].

3. Results

3.1. Clinical A. fumigatus Genotypes

The different genotypes isolated from 28 patients during the study period are shown in Table 1. Among the 56 clinical A. fumigatus strains isolated from patients, 28 different genotypes were detected. Strains from the same patient hosting the same genotype are summarized only in one representative isolate and similar isolates obtained from the same sample are excluded in the table.
Of the 28 patients analyzed, 22 (78.6%) had only one genotype of A. fumigatus. However; the remaining patients harbored more than one genotype of A. fumigatus; specifically, five (17.8%) of the patients (14, 17, 22, 24, and 26) harbor in their lungs two different genotypes; and in patient 12 (3.6%) coexisted three different genotypes of A. fumigatus. (Table 1).

3.2. Hospital Environmental A. fumigatus Genotypes

The chronological distribution of the environmental A. fumigatus isolates and level of A. fumigatus conidia obtained in the different rooms and ICUs are summarized in Table 2. Out of a total of 336 environmental samples taken during 2020 at the hospital, only seven showed positive growth of A. fumigatus (2%) with a minimum count of 1 CFU/m3 each one (Figure 1).
During all the study period, only 1 CFU/m3 of A. fumigatus was isolated in ICU 5 and ICU 6. The remaining ICUs did not show any growth of Aspergillus.
Among the seven environmental A. fumigatus isolates, seven different genotypes were identified (Table 2).

3.3. Correlation between Clinical and Environmental A. fumigatus Genotypes

There was only one coincidence of genotypes between patient and environment during the study period; although there was no correlation in time or location. Specifically, patient 22 (diagnosed on 20 November 2020, on the fifth floor, room 532 B) in whom two different genotypes of A. fumigatus coexisted, one of them (t01m1.1g08A.e07) matched with the one isolated in the hospital environment (low level, box 54 on 30 October 2020), being the time difference of 25 days and a location difference of five floors (Table 3).
Regarding matches between patients were as follows:
  • Patient 8 admitted to Pneumology SE 2° B on 8 October 2020, exhibited the same A. fumigatus genotype (t03m1.1g05A.e09) as patient 19 admitted to box 36 on 20 November 2020; however, there was a significant difference over time (44 days) and in unit location (2 floors).
  • Patient 9 admitted to box 39 on 8 October 2020, exhibited the same A. fumigatus genotype (t02m1.1g09.e16) as patient 14 was admitted to box 47 on 7 November 2020; however, there was a significant difference over time (31 days) and in unit location (different ICUs).
  • Four patients (2, 18, 27 and 28) share the same genotype (t02m1.1g09.e05). Analyzing the patients individually, we observed that there is no correlation neither in time nor in their location in the hospital. The first patient (2) diagnosed on 30 March 2020, in box 10 presents a significant difference of 228 days with the second patient (18) admitted in box 91. The difference with the third patient (27) admitted in box 57 was 254 days, and the difference in time with the fourth patient (28) admitted in box 18 was 279 days. The four patients were admitted to different ICUs.
In summary, although several patients harbored the same A. fumigatus genotype, none of them were at the same time and/or in the same unit.

3.4. Aspergillus PCR in the Primary Respiratory Sample

Aspergillus PCR could be performed on the primary respiratory sample (sputum, tracheal aspirate, and/or bronchoalveolar lavage) obtained after admission, either on the ward and/or in the ICU.
Of the primary samples available from 20 patients, in 18 patients the Aspergillus PCR was positive with a CT < 36; and in the other two patients in whom the Aspergillus PCR was negative with a cycle greater than 36, the presence of Aspergillus was detected with an average of 110 copies/mL, an amount that increased in the following respiratory sample whose Aspergillus PCR was already positive.
This data supports the presence and/or co-infection of SARS-CoV-2 and Aspergillus since the first day of hospital admission.

3.5. Antifungal Susceptibility and Cyp51A Amplification

All isolates were susceptible to all antifungals tested and none of them showed any mutation responsible for azole resistance.

4. Discussion

Our study supports the idea that, in our population, COVID-associated aspergillosis is not a nosocomial infection, but a community acquired one, with home environment being the main suspected source of infection.
There are several findings that directly and indirectly back this claim. Firstly, the lack of epidemiological relationship between A. fumigatus isolates from hospital environmental air and clinical genotypes reinforce the role of community environmental air in the acquisition of CAPA. In our study, there was only one identical air-patient genotype that, however, did not coincide in time nor in location.
Secondly, during the study period, our hospital environment monitoring has shown excellent air quality, with an Aspergillus load of <0.005 CFU/m3. Only two ICUs had 1 CFU/m3 Aspergillus conidia, and they were not related to any of the cases.
It is important to highlight that all the isolates were prospectively collected, which is one of the strengths of our study. We have been able to genotype environmental and clinical isolates, and we have also used a high-discriminatory molecular typing tool (TRESPERG), without finding any matches between environmental hospital air and clinical genotypes. The wide diversity of A. fumigatus genotypes among patients and hospital environmental air shows an absence of specific clonal populations in the clinical setting, and thus also supports the hypothesis of a community acquired infection.
There is, as yet, no agreement about how to define a nosocomial case of IA, and different authors have adopted different standards. Patterson et al. [31] defined a nosocomial case of the disease as one that occurred > 1 week after admission to the hospital or <2 weeks after discharge. Although nosocomial outbreaks of IA have contributed to the current perception that most cases of IA are hospital acquired, the short time interval between admission and infection suggests that the patients are colonized with Aspergillus before they enter to the hospital, and a significant number of Aspergillus infections are acquired on an outpatient basis.
Indeed, the potential impact of Aspergillus colonization before hospitalization remains an issue that is still broadly discussed [17,32]; and the role of previous colonization with Aspergillus needs to be taken into account while also looking at risk factors related to the host (i.e., immunodepression, underlying diseases, etc.) as well as environmental factors (i.e., airway ventilation, home environment, etc.).
One of the complexities of this diagnosis is that the incubation period for CAPA patients is usually unknown and probably varies among different patients, making it hard to standardize a definition. One of the variables to consider is the fungal load of the previously colonized patient. Logically, with a higher fungal load of Aspergillus colonization and a greater viral load of SARS-CoV-2, the progression from colonization to clinical infection could be faster; and, if the patient also had immunosuppression (older, chronic lung disease, etc.) the time elapsed until clinical presentation of invasive aspergillosis could be shorter. Another risk factor to be considered is previous chronic lung damage: in the study by Prattes et al. [5], lung damage was described as a risk factor for the appearance of CAPA, and in the study published by García-Clemente et al. [11], 23% of patients with CAPA had some prior chronic respiratory disease, with these diseases remaining an independent risk factor for CAPA diagnosis in multivariate analysis. It is possible that previous colonization by Aspergillus in the lungs of patients with chronic pulmonary diseases could lead to invasive aspergillosis by adding the immune dysregulation and immunosuppression derived from severe SARS-CoV-2 disease. Based on these previous hypothesis, our study shows frequent co-infection of SARS-CoV-2 and Aspergillus in the first respiratory sample obtained from a patient on his first hospital admission day, which proves that there are patients previously colonized and/or infected by Aspegillus, in their own home and/or outside the hospital, whose symptoms appeared when, due to the severity of the viral infection, they became immunosuppressed.
If we considered how the progression of invasive aspergillosis can be divided into four stages [33,34,35], the majority of CAPA patients in our hospital would be in scenario 2 (Figure 2), namely, community Aspergillus colonization, community COVID disease, and hospital diagnosis of community acquired-CAPA. In some patients, the diagnosis of CAPA was even diagnosed post-mortem and there was not time to implement antifungal treatment. This is the main reason why we must advocate for performing a fungal screening to look for an early mycological diagnosis in the primary respiratory sample in all patients with risk factors (older, with chronic lung disease, …) [11] in order to improve the survival of CAPA patients.
Finally, the last indirect evidence that supports our hypothesis that CAPA patients acquire aspergillosis in the community is that, in the first wave of COVID-19 in Spain, all people were housebound and therefore, the main focus of exposure and subsequent colonization would be the patients’ own homes, outside of the hospital setting.
Our study emphasizes the need for preventive measures outside of the hospital and, since the incidence of community Aspergillus infections will probably continue rising as high risk patients spend more time outside the hospital setting, we believe that taking care of the home environment of these patients would be essential.
The main limitation of our study is that we have not taken environmental samples at patients’ homes, but we have obtained direct evidence that the IA of our patients was not hospital-acquired since there were no matches between hospital-patient genotypes. Specific host and environmental risk factors still need to be studied in greater detail for CAPA patients.

5. Conclusions

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study monitoring and genotyping A. fumigatus isolates from hospital air and COVID-19 patients admitted with aspergillosis, obtained during one year. Our study reveals a wide diversity of A. fumigatus genotypes among patients and the absence of specific clonal populations in the clinical setting, and highlights that COVID-associated aspergillosis is not a nosocomial infection; on the other hand, our data support the hypothesis of community acquisition, having home environment (pandemic period at home) as the main suspected focus of infection.
In the future, the role of prior colonization by Aspergillus needs prospective studies, since when IA appears during hospitalization, it is difficult to decide whether it is an acquired infection or really an infection that manifests itself during hospitalization starting from an underlying state of previous colonization, that progresses due to the situation of immunosuppression of the admitted patient, and studies must be carried out that take into account the host (immunosuppression, underlying disease, etc.) and environmental situation (ventilation, exposure to water supplies, etc.) characteristics that may be related to the risk of IA.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, T.P.-G.d.l.R. and E.M.; methodology, I.G.-J., A.R., J.L.C.-A. and A.F.-A.; software, I.G.-J., A.R. and E.M.; validation, T.P.-G.d.l.R., E.M., M.T.-A. and M.G.-C.; formal analysis, E.M. and S.M.-G.; investigation, T.P.-G.d.l.R., E.M., M.G.-C., E.G.-P., L.C.-M., I.F.-S. and S.M.-G.; resources, T.P.-G.d.l.R. and M.G.-C.; writing—original draft preparation, T.P.-G.d.l.R., M.G.-C., A.F.-A. and E.M.; writing—review and editing, T.P.-G.d.l.R., M.G.-C., A.F.-A. and E.M.; visualization, T.P.-G.d.l.R., M.G.-C., A.F.-A., E.M. and J.L.C.-A.; supervision, T.P.-G.d.l.R., F.V.-V., M.M.-S. and M.L.S.-N.; project administration, T.P.-G.d.l.R. and M.G.-C. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the Institutional Review Board (or Ethics Committee) of Principado of Asturias (protocol code 2020.472 and date of approval: 26 March 2020).

Informed Consent Statement

Patient consent was waived because it was the usual clinical practice in patients admitted to ICU, and most patients were intubated.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

Members of the HUCAPA Group: Enrique García Carús, Tomás Suárez-Zarracina Secades, Mercedes Rodríguez Pérez, Marta Elena Álvarez-Argüelles, Susana Rojo, Jose Antonio Boga Riveiro, Marta Mateos Mazón, Eva Fernández Bretón, Lorena Forcelledo-Espina, Belén Rivaya, Ana Fernández-Verdugo, Blanca Leoz-Gordillo, Rodrigo Albillos-Almaraz, Cristina Iglesias, Marta Sandoval, Cristian Castelló-Abietar, Isabel Díaz Costales, Edurne Rodrigo Arrazola, Pablo González Moreno, Guillermo Albaiceta, Lisardo Iglesias, Diego Parra, Cecilia del Busto, Amparo Templado Barroso, María Magdalena Ramallal García, María Cristina Riestra Martínez, María Esther Díaz Díaz, María Isabel Díaz Zurrón, Francisco Carreño Alonso, Sandra Martínez Fernández, Martina Sánchez Araujo, Davinia Bravo Álvarez, Gonzalo Solís García, Jose Iraola García, Jorge González Díaz, Josu Jiménez Idoeta.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Abbreviations

ARDSAcute respiratory distress syndrome
BALBronchoalveolar lavage.
B-D-GBeta-D glucan.
CAPACOVID-19 Associated Pulmonary Aspergillosis)
COVIDCoronavirus disease.
ECMM/ISHAMEuropean Confederation of Medical Mycology/International Society for Human and Animal Mycology
StudyGroup Education and Research Consortium.
GMGalactomannan.
ICUIntensive care unit.
LFALateral flow assays
LFDLateral flow device.
MALDI-TOFMatrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of -light
NBLNon-bronchoscopic lavage
OROdds ratio
PCRPolymerase chain reaction.
TATracheal aspirate.

References

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Figure 1. Map of Intensive Care Units (ICU), Intensive Post-Surgical Resuscitation Units (PSRU) and Operating Rooms (SB). Level of A. fumigatus conidia load obtained in ICUs 5 and 6 with 1 CFU/m3 each one during the study period.
Figure 1. Map of Intensive Care Units (ICU), Intensive Post-Surgical Resuscitation Units (PSRU) and Operating Rooms (SB). Level of A. fumigatus conidia load obtained in ICUs 5 and 6 with 1 CFU/m3 each one during the study period.
Jof 08 00316 g001
Figure 2. Scenario 2—Community Aspergillus colonization, community COVID disease, and hospital diagnosis of community acquired-CAPA.
Figure 2. Scenario 2—Community Aspergillus colonization, community COVID disease, and hospital diagnosis of community acquired-CAPA.
Jof 08 00316 g002
Table 1. A. fumigatus TRESPERg genotypes of isolates obtained from patient samples and their location at the hospital.
Table 1. A. fumigatus TRESPERg genotypes of isolates obtained from patient samples and their location at the hospital.
SAMPLEPATIENTDATELOCATIONGENOTYPE
H-1880123 March 2020BOX 45t18bm6.3g09.e09
H-1882230 March 2020BOX 10t02m1.1g09.e05
H-1883331 March 2020BOX 44t01m1.1g09.e07
H-188544 April 2020915 Bt01m5.1g09.e07
H-189154 April 2020BOX 29t09m1.1g08A.e07
H-1918627 April 2020BOX 54t28m1.1g09.e20
H-1935716 May 2020513 At03m1.3g08A.e07
H-209688 October 2020SE 2° Bt03m1.1g05A.e09
H-209798 October 2020BOX 39t02m1.1g09.e16
H-21041014 October 2020BOX 54t03m3.3g05A.e07
H-21291123 October 2020BOX 32t04Am1.1g05A.e07
H-21351225 October 2020BOX 14t11m1.2g09.e13
H-21361225 October 2020BOX 14t03m1.1g10.e06
H-2159123 November 2020BOX 14t02m1.8g09.e05
H-21521330 October 2020BOX 49t06Bm6.1g08A.e09
H-2158144 November 2020BOX 47t06Bm3.4g08A.e11
H-2169147 November 2020BOX 47t02m1.1g09.e16
H-2167155 November 2020BOX 33t03m1.1g04.e07
H-2175169 November 2020BOX 24t04Bm1.2g12.e15
H-21841713 November 2020BOX 89t04Am3.4g08A.e11
H-21851713 November 2020BOX 89t01m5.1g09.e06
H-21861813 November 2020BOX 91t02m1.1g09.e05
H-21941920 November 2020BOX 36t03m1.1g05A.e09
H-22032019 November 2020925 At03m1.1g10.e09
H-22112131 November 2020631 Bt02m14.1g09.e05
H-22172224 November 2020532 Bt01m1.1g08A.e07
H-22242227 November 2020306 Bt03m1.1g09.e07
H-2238233 December 2020BOX 67t02m1.2g09.e05
H-2239244 December 2020BOX 26t04Am3.3g17.eND
H-22672416 December 2020BOX 31t04Am3.3g24.eND
H-2244258 December 2020BOX 84t01m3.4g05A.e07
H-2245269 December 2020BOX 40St11m13.1g08A.e16
H-22572613 December 2020BOX 40St01m5.1g09.e13
H-2246278 December 2020BOX 57t02m1.1g09.e05
H-2279281 January 2021BOX 18t02m1.1g09.e05
Table 2. A. fumigatus TRESPERg genotypes of isolates from environmental samples.
Table 2. A. fumigatus TRESPERg genotypes of isolates from environmental samples.
SAMPLEDATELOCATIONCFU/m3GENOTYPE
HUCA-180023 January 2020HB 902104Am1.3g08A.e07
HUCA-180123 January 2020HB 9021t04Am1.1g04.e07
HUCA-190314 April 2020UCI 61t03m1.1g09.e09
HUCA-201129 July 2020HB 9021t02m11.1g09.e16
HUCA-206110 September 2020Cytogenetics1t03m1.3g08A.e09
HUCA-213019 October 2020Hb 9031t02m1.1g09.e13
HUCA-215130 October 2020UCI 5 1t01m1.1g08A.e07
Table 3. A. fumigatus isolates with the same TRESPERg genotype.
Table 3. A. fumigatus isolates with the same TRESPERg genotype.
SAMPLEORIGINDATELOCATIONGENOTYPE
HUCA-2151Air Sample30 October 2020UCI-5 BOX 54t01m1.1g08A.e07
H-2217Patient 2224 November 2020532 Bt01m1.1g08A.e07
H-2096Patient 88 October 2020SE 2° Bt03m1.1g05A.e09
H-2194Patient 1920 November 2020BOX 36t03m1.1g05A.e09
H-2097Patient 98 October 2020BOX 39t02m1.1g09.e16
H-2169Patient 147 November 2020BOX 47t02m1.1g09.e16
H-1882Patient 230 March 2020BOX 10t02m1.1g09.e05
H-2186Patient 1813 November 2020BOX 91t02m1.1g09.e05
H-2246Patient 278 December 2020BOX 57t02m1.1g09.e05
H-2279Patient 281 January 2021BOX 18t02m1.1g09.e05
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Peláez-García de la Rasilla, T.; González-Jiménez, I.; Fernández-Arroyo, A.; Roldán, A.; Carretero-Ares, J.L.; García-Clemente, M.; Telenti-Asensio, M.; García-Prieto, E.; Martínez-Suarez, M.; Vázquez-Valdés, F.; et al. COVID-19 Associated Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CAPA): Hospital or Home Environment as a Source of Life-Threatening Aspergillus fumigatus Infection? J. Fungi 2022, 8, 316. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof8030316

AMA Style

Peláez-García de la Rasilla T, González-Jiménez I, Fernández-Arroyo A, Roldán A, Carretero-Ares JL, García-Clemente M, Telenti-Asensio M, García-Prieto E, Martínez-Suarez M, Vázquez-Valdés F, et al. COVID-19 Associated Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CAPA): Hospital or Home Environment as a Source of Life-Threatening Aspergillus fumigatus Infection? Journal of Fungi. 2022; 8(3):316. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof8030316

Chicago/Turabian Style

Peláez-García de la Rasilla, Teresa, Irene González-Jiménez, Andrea Fernández-Arroyo, Alejandra Roldán, Jose Luis Carretero-Ares, Marta García-Clemente, Mauricio Telenti-Asensio, Emilio García-Prieto, Mar Martínez-Suarez, Fernando Vázquez-Valdés, and et al. 2022. "COVID-19 Associated Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CAPA): Hospital or Home Environment as a Source of Life-Threatening Aspergillus fumigatus Infection?" Journal of Fungi 8, no. 3: 316. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof8030316

APA Style

Peláez-García de la Rasilla, T., González-Jiménez, I., Fernández-Arroyo, A., Roldán, A., Carretero-Ares, J. L., García-Clemente, M., Telenti-Asensio, M., García-Prieto, E., Martínez-Suarez, M., Vázquez-Valdés, F., Melón-García, S., Caminal-Montero, L., Fernández-Simón, I., Mellado, E., & Sánchez-Núñez, M. L., on behalf of the HUCAPA Group. (2022). COVID-19 Associated Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CAPA): Hospital or Home Environment as a Source of Life-Threatening Aspergillus fumigatus Infection? Journal of Fungi, 8(3), 316. https://doi.org/10.3390/jof8030316

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