WHO Critical- and High-Priority Fungal Pathogens Beyond Human Medicine: Expanding One Health Surveillance
Ricardo Lopes, Andreia Garcês, Vanessa Silva, Hugo Lima de Carvalho, Filipe Sampaio, Gonçalo Barros, Cátia Fernandes, Ana Patrícia Lopes, Cátia Marques, Luís Cardoso, Elsa Leclerc Duarte, Ana Cláudia CoelhoIn 2022, the World Health Organization (WHO) published the Fungal Priority Pathogens List (FPPL), yet its application has remained largely focused on human medicine, with limited consideration of animal hosts and veterinary diagnostics. This retrospective study aimed to characterise the occurrence of WHO critical- and high-priority yeasts in veterinary clinical submissions in Portugal within an explicit One Health framework. All yeast-positive submissions received by a Portuguese veterinary diagnostic laboratory between 2019 and 2026 were reviewed. Isolates were identified phenotypically, by an automated identification system and by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Data on host species, sample type and year of submission were analysed using standard descriptive and inferential statistics. Among 2033 mycological submissions, 219 were yeast-positive. Out of these, 82 isolates (37.4%) corresponded to WHO critical- or high-priority taxa, most frequently Candida albicans, followed by Nakaseomyces glabratus, Cryptococcus neoformans var. neoformans, the Candida parapsilosis complex and Candida tropicalis. The remaining 137 isolates (62.6%) corresponded to non-WHO taxa, among which the most frequent were Papiliotrema laurentii and Debaryomyces hansenii (n = 21 each; 15.3%), followed by the Stephanoascus ciferrii complex (n = 15; 11.0%), Meyerozyma guilliermondii and Candida sake (n = 12 each; 8.8%), and Wickerhamomyces anomalus (n = 9; 6.6%). WHO-prioritised taxa were recovered predominantly from ornamental birds, as well as from dogs, cats and marine mammals. These findings demonstrate that FPPL-listed yeasts are regularly detected among yeast-positive veterinary diagnostic submissions and highlight ornamental birds as prominent hosts within this dataset.