Background: Recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC), despite its worldwide prevalence, has limited treatment options; and a long-term prophylactic regimen utilising fluconazole is the dominant choice.
Objectives: An increase in fluconazole resistance is reported, and little information is available about the reversibility of resistance status following the withdrawal of fluconazole.
Methods: Repeated antifungal susceptibility tests (ASTs) for fluconazole at a median interval of 3 months between them were evaluated in women with refractory or recurrent VVC patients at the Vaginitis clinic from 2012 to 2021 (10 years) and performed at pH 7 and pH 4.
Compared to other species of yeasts, the growth of Candida glabrata is inhibited by many different strains of killer yeasts. The ionophoric K1 and K2 killer toxins are broadly inhibitory to all clinical isolates of C. glabrata from patients with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, despite high levels of resistance to clinically relevant antifungal therapeutics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Oral metronidazole therapy is the standard of care for bacterial vaginosis (BV), yet it has alarming rates of recurrence and refractory responses among recurrent BV (RBV) patients. This study addresses whether high dose vaginal metronidazole therapy (HDM) is beneficial in RBV patients who fail after standard of care (SOC) therapy, whether diagnostic test scores proximal to the HDM predict clinical outcome, and whether menses, coitus, or race influences therapy outcome.
Patients And Methods: A total of 90 patients with RBV were given SOC and tracked 74 for up to 9 months.
Following all forms of therapy for bacterial vaginosis (BV), recurrence rates are extremely high. Many diagnostic tests are available that differentiate bacterial vaginosis from other types of vaginal disorders, but none predict recurrence after treatment, nor are any vetted for monitoring ongoing responses to treatment. Our goal was to determine which tests, and at what optimal times, have prognostic value in predicting recurrence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The novel echinocandin CD101 has stability properties amenable to topical formulation for use in the treatment of acute vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) and recurrent VVC (RVVC). CD101 has demonstrated potent antifungal activity at pH 7, but assessment of its activity at the physiological pH of the vaginal environment is needed.
Objectives: To evaluate the antifungal activity of CD101 against clinical VVC isolates of Candida spp.