The Emerging Global Threat of Candida auris: A Call for Enhanced Public Health Policy and Regional Coordination
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance represents a paramount challenge to global public health in the 21st century. The multidrug-resistant fungal pathogen Candida auris poses a critical and escalating threat to global public health. Characterized by rapid nosocomial transmission, persistent environmental contamination, and resistance to multiple antifungal classes, C. auris challenges healthcare systems worldwide. Its independent emergence across distinct geographic clades and exponential rise in cases, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, underscore the urgent need for robust, coordinated response. This review synthesizes the current knowledge on C. auris with a focus on its implications for public health policy, particularly in the European and Balkan healthcare settings, where surveillance gaps and cross-border transmission risks remain pronounced. We analyze the key drivers of spread, including diagnostic misidentification, extensive antifungal resistance, and lapses in infection control, and evaluate the strain on surveillance and hospital preparedness. Effective mitigation is fundamentally dependent on implementing comprehensive, multi-faceted infection prevention and control strategies, guided by antifungal stewardship and rapid diagnostics. We conclude that addressing the C. auris threat requires an urgent, coordinated international and regional response focused on strengthening surveillance networks, standardizing diagnostic and infection prevention and control protocols, and fostering data sharing across borders to contain this resilient pathogen.
© 2026 Gordana Mirchevska, published by Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.