Identification of the environmental source of infection for a domestic ferret with cryptococcosis

Author:

Schmertmann Laura J.1234ORCID,Wardman Alison1234,Setyo Laura1234,Kan Alex1234,Meyer Wieland1234,Malik Richard1234,Krockenberger Mark B.1234

Affiliation:

1. Sydney School of Veterinary Science (Schmertmann, Setyo, Krockenberger), Molecular Mycology Research Laboratory, Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Westmead Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health (Schmertmann, Kan, Meyer), Veterinary Pathology Diagnostic Services (Setyo, Krockenberger), Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity (Meyer, Krockenberger) and Centre for Veterinary Education (Malik), The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

2. The Westmead Institute for Medical Research, Westmead, New South Wales, Australia (Schmertmann, Kan, Meyer)

3. Richmond Veterinary Hospital, Richmond, New South Wales, Australia (Wardman)

4. Westmead Hospital (Research and Education Network), Westmead, New South Wales, Australia (Meyer)

Abstract

Cryptococcosis, caused by the Cryptococcus gattii and C. neoformans species complexes, is an environmentally acquired mycosis affecting a broad range of host species. Among 9 communally housed ferrets, a 5-y-old castrated male ferret domiciled in an outdoor enclosure in Sydney, Australia was diagnosed with sinonasal cryptococcosis. Clinical signs resolved during 18 mo of itraconazole therapy, but the ferret was eventually euthanized because of splenic hemangiosarcoma. At postmortem, microscopic foci of persistent cryptococcosis were detected. The diagnosis raised concerns that the owners and other ferrets were exposed to a common environmental source of infection, thus prompting an investigation. Soil samples, swabs of a hollow eucalypt log (used for behavioral enrichment), and nasal swabs from 8 asymptomatic ferrets were collected. Nasal exudate (obtained at diagnosis) and tissues (collected at postmortem) were available from the clinical case. Bird seed agar culture resulted in a heavy growth of Cryptococcus spp. from one environmental site (the log), one nasal swab, and nasal exudate and tissues from the clinical case. All other samples were culture-negative. Sub-cultured isolates from the log were a mixture of C. gattii molecular type VGI and C. neoformans molecular type VNI. Ferret isolates were a similar mixture of C. gattii VGI (all disease isolates) and C. neoformans VNI (nasal-colonizing isolate). Multilocus sequence typing further revealed the ferret isolates as identical to environmental isolates collected from the log, confirming the log as the source of clinical disease and nasal colonization. The log was removed to prevent further exposure to a high environmental load of Cryptococcus spp.

Funder

Sydney School of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary

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