
A terrifying warning has been issued by scientists: deadly fungi are spreading fast globally. These drug-resistant 'super fungi' pose a growing risk. They are becoming increasingly deadly for vulnerable patients with weakened immune systems. Experts are calling for urgent action before infections become untreatable.
An international group of 50 scientists, including researchers from the University of Manchester, has sounded the alarm in Nature Medicine. They warn that fungi in soil, crops, and even hospitals are increasingly resistant to the medicines used to control them.
While healthy people face little danger, these infections can be deadly for those with weakened immune systems. Strategies to combat antimicrobial resistance have focused too much on bacteria and viruses, largely overlooking fungi.
Several dangerous fungi are already on the rise. Trichophyton indotineae causes severe skin infections that are increasingly hard to treat.
Hospitals are battling Candida auris, a fungus that can trigger life-threatening bloodstream infections. It kills around a third of those affected.
Aspergillus fumigatus, a common mould, has also developed resistance to widely used azole drugs in many countries.
Much of this resistance begins in the environment, not in hospitals. Fungicides used in agriculture are chemically similar to antifungal medicines used in human healthcare.
This similarity allows resistant strains to evolve in fields before reaching patients. This link, known as One Health, means crop resistance can undermine human treatments.
Professor Mike Bromley from the University of Manchester highlighted the issue: "Farmers use huge amounts of fungicides to protect crops, and some of these chemicals stay in the environment for decades."
He added: "There is now clear evidence these chemicals are helping fungi evolve into strains that can no longer be treated in people, plants or animals."
Scientists have developed a five-step plan to tackle the crisis. It focuses on improving awareness, surveillance, infection control, responsible drug use, and investing in new treatments.
This plan aims to shape the World Health Organization’s updated Global Action Plan on antimicrobial resistance later this year.
Professor Paul Verweij from Radboud University Medical Center warned: "We are already seeing a quiet rise in dangerous fungi, from Candida auris in intensive care units to moulds in the community that no longer respond to standard medicines."
Professor Michaela Lackner of the Medical University of Innsbruck reinforced the point: "Using the same types of antifungal chemicals in both farming and medicine is speeding up resistance, and what happens in the fields is now affecting what happens in hospital wards."
Experts warn that if action isn't taken, more infections will become untreatable, putting lives and food supplies at risk. Governments and international bodies are urged to prioritise antifungal resistance now.
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OFFICIAL SOURCE VERIFICATION: This report is based on official data from University Newsroom. Document: Drug resistant fungi warning Source Link: [Read the official report from University Newsroom](https://www.manchester.ac.uk/about/news/drug-resistant-fungi-warning/)
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Editorial Note: This report utilises automated data-sourcing and drafting technologies to ensure rapid coverage. Every article undergoes rigorous human fact-checking and editorial review by the Trend Wire Media Editorial Desk to ensure accuracy and adherence to our journalistic standards.