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‘The Last of Us’ might be fiction, but fungi are a looming threat

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A patient with leukemia undergoes a bone marrow transplant to treat her disease. The procedure goes well. But before her immune system has time to recover, another problem takes hold — a fungal infection caused by Candida, a type of yeast that lives on the skin or inside the body, commonly in the gut. It bypassed her hobbled immune system, making its way into her bloodstream, infecting her spleen and other internal organs, triggering sepsis. Her doctors are now in a race to keep her from becoming one of the estimated 19% to 24% affected patients who succumb to this type of invasive Candida infection.

“Candida is extraordinarily aggressive and there are very few treatment options. And if you don’t make the diagnosis on time or you give the wrong therapy, because the Candida is resistant to that therapy, you don’t have many opportunities to correct the course,” said Dr. David Angulo, CEO and president of New Jersey-based Scynexis, a biotechnology company developing antifungal treatments.

Professional headshot of Dr. Neil Clancy

Dr. Neil Clancy, professor of medicine, the University of Pittsburgh

Permission granted by Neil Clancy

 

While fungal infections don’t grab as much attention as super bugs, they’re a threat that’s looming large. Behind this increasing threat are factors such as drug resistance, a greater number of high-risk patients and more environmental exposure, said Dr. Neil Clancy, professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and chief of the Infectious Diseases Section at VA Pittsburgh Health Care System.

“(Fungal infections are) a lesser problem than bacterial infections — but it’s a major problem,” he said.

A rising threat

Although there are millions of species of fungi, only a few hundred affect human health. Most often they cause non-life-threatening nuisance infections like athlete’s foot. The fungi that make people sick often come from inside their bodies, but these organisms can also be encountered in the environment. Inhaling microscopic spores from the desert-dwelling fungus, Coccidioides, for example, causes coccidioidomycosis, commonly known as Valley fever. Severe and life-threatening systemic fungal infections are less common, and primarily affect people in certain high-risk groups such as cancer patients, organ transplant recipients and those being treated in the ICU.

And as people live longer with serious and complex diseases, they are more are at risk for these virulent infections, Clancy said. Some fungi, such as Candida auris, have developed resistance to one or more of the limited antifungal drugs available, complicating treatment.

“There’s probably broader changes that are going on and these might be things like climate change, or environmental change with various habitats being destroyed or altered and, people moving into places that previously were less inhabited or uninhabited,” Clancy said. “So, it’s probably multifactorial, but all these things are coming together and we’re seeing more fungal infections and we’re seeing infections by more types of fungi.” It’s not just human infections, but animal infections, both in nature and on farms, he said.


“In the past 20 years there was very limited innovation in the antifungal space.”

Dr. David Angulo

CEO, president, Scynexis


There’s also emerging research that hints fungi may play a broader role in human health. According to the American Association for Cancer Research, fungal infections could not only be more likely to occur in cancer patients, but also involved in the formation and spread of certain types of cancer, including pancreatic cancer.

“I think we’ll learn a lot more (in) the years ahead, but you know, Candida, in particular in the gut, may be linked to a wide variety of diseases as well as just general health,” Clancy explained.

Insufficient treatment options

Antifungal treatments aren’t keeping pace with the growth of fungal infections. Currently, there are three broad classes of systemic antifungal drugs — azoles, polyenes, and beta-glucan synthesis inhibitors (echinocandins), Clancy said. And in each category, the options are limited. The complexity of drug development is often the barrier to getting more drugs on the market.

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