Problem/Condition: Candida auris is an emerging yeast that is frequently resistant to antifungal drugs. C. auris can cause invasive infections associated with high mortality and can colonize patients asymptomatically, which facilitates transmission in health care settings. Since it was first reported in the United States in 2016, C. auris has been identified in multiple states, with increasing numbers of cases reported annually. Monitoring national trends in cases identified through clinical testing and screening for colonization is critical to guide infection prevention and control efforts. Period Covered: 2022-2024. Description of System: State and jurisdictional health departments voluntarily report clinical and screening C. auris cases to CDC using standardized case definitions of the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists. Clinical cases are defined as detection of C. auris from specimens collected for diagnostic purposes; screening cases are defined as detection from colonization screening swabs. Cases were reported to CDC through the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) or Data Collation and Integration for Public Health Event Response (DCIPHER) platforms. Data included patient age and sex, case type, specimen type (for clinical cases), health care facility type, Antimicrobial Resistance Laboratory Network geographic region, and specimen collection date. Analyses were descriptive and limited to cases with specimens collected during 2022-2024. Results: During 2022-2024, a total of 13,507 clinical C. auris cases were reported to CDC, increasing from 2,882 in 2022 to 4,428 in 2023 and 6,197 in 2024, with smaller annual percentage increases over time (53.7% from 2022 to 2023 and 39.9% from 2023 to 2024). Most clinical cases occurred among adults aged ≥45 years (87.8%) and among males (61.0%). The most common specimen types among all clinical cases were urine (31.5%) and blood (30.2%); by year, the proportion of blood as the specimen type was 34.4% in 2022, 30.2% in 2023, and 25.6% in 2024. Most clinical cases were identified through specimens collected in acute care hospitals (76.6%) and long-term acute care hospitals (17.8%).During the same period, a total of 27,853 screening cases were reported to CDC, increasing from 6,226 in 2022 to 9,195 in 2023 and 12,432 in 2024. Screening cases most frequently occurred among adults aged ≥45 years (90.0%) and males (57.9%). Among cases with known facility type, the proportion of specimens collected in acute care hospitals increased from 24.7% in 2022 to 50.7% in 2024, whereas the proportion of specimens collected in long-term acute care hospitals decreased from 56.1% to 35.7% during the same period. Interpretation: The number of clinical and screening C. auris cases reported to CDC increased during 2022-2024, indicating ongoing transmission in U.S. health care settings. Although annual percentage increases in clinical cases declined over time, absolute case counts reported to CDC continued to rise. The increasing proportion of screening cases with specimens collected in acute care hospitals might reflect increased use of screening in acute care hospitals, including screening at admission. Public Health Action: Because of increases in the number of reported C. auris cases, sustained infection prevention and control efforts in health care facilities, including adherence to transmission-based precautions, environmental disinfection with agents effective against C. auris, and communication of C. auris status during patient transfers remain essential to preventing clinical infections and colonization. Because this pathogen is frequently resistant to antifungal drugs, continued investment in laboratory capacity and surveillance, including antifungal susceptibility testing and screening of patients at high risk for C. auris infection, can support timely detection and guide prevention strategies. Ongoing public health coordination at federal, state, and local levels is critical to limit further spread and to address emerging antifungal drug resistance.
Gold et al. (Tue,) studied this question.