# Unusual Sporotrichosis: A New Concept Proposal on the Unexpected Faces of Sporothrix spp. Infection

**Authors:** Jayne Araújo da Silva, Adriany Lucas dos Santos, Júlia Andrade de Castro Rodrigues, Mariana de Paula Pires, Marcelo Cerilo-Filho, Gil Benard, José Rodrigo Santos Silva, Ricardo Luiz Dantas Machado, Jéssica Dornelas da Silva, Héctor Manuel Mora-Montes, Gutemberg Gomes Alves, Andréa Regina de Souza Baptista

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jof12020155 · 2026-02-21

## TL;DR

This paper introduces 'unusual sporotrichosis' as a rare, severe form of fungal infection that affects healthy people and is often missed in diagnosis.

## Contribution

The paper proposes a new clinical concept of 'unusual sporotrichosis' and characterizes its global patterns.

## Key findings

- Unusual sporotrichosis mainly affects adults aged 40–59 and is more common in males.
- Osteoarticular and systemic forms are the most frequent, with the worst outcomes seen in osteoarticular cases.
- Sporothrix schenckii is the most common species involved, with sapronotic transmission being the primary route.

## Abstract

“Unusual sporotrichosis”, a concept proposed in this review, refers to severe, extracutaneous, or anatomically atypical manifestations of sporotrichosis occurring in immunocompetent hosts and represents an underrecognized clinical subset associated with important diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. This systematic review aimed to characterize unusual sporotrichosis worldwide and to clarify its epidemiological, clinical, diagnostic, and therapeutic patterns. Following a registered protocol and PRISMA guidelines, PubMed, Scopus, and BVS/LILACS were searched up to November 2025 using a PICO-based strategy. Eligible studies included peer-reviewed case reports and case series with laboratory-confirmed sporotrichosis in patients without immunosuppression, diabetes mellitus, alcoholism, or other confounding comorbidities; classical lymphocutaneous and fixed cutaneous forms were excluded. From 922 records, 39 studies were included (13 case series and 26 case reports), yielding 55 cases reported between 1957 and 2024 across five world regions, mainly from the United States of America and Brazil. Adults aged 40–59 years (41.8%) and males (74.5%) predominated. Sapronotic transmission was most frequent (69.0%), although zoonotic transmission increased over time. Sporothrix schenckii/Sporothrix schenckii sensu stricto was the predominant species (87.3%). Osteoarticular (30.9%) and systemic (27.2%) forms were the most common presentations. Although cure was achieved in most cases (58.1%), sequelae were frequent (21.8%), and the worst prognosis—including most deaths—was observed in osteoarticular sporotrichosis. Unusual sporotrichosis is globally distributed and clinically distinct; therefore, early recognition and multimodal diagnostic and therapeutic strategies are essential to improve outcome.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** sporotrichosis (MONDO:0005968)
- **Species:** Sporothrix schenckii (taxon 29908)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CALM1 (calmodulin 1) [NCBI Gene 801] {aka CALML2, CAM2, CAM3, CAMB, CAMC, CAMI}, TNF (tumor necrosis factor) [NCBI Gene 7124] {aka DIF, IMD127, TNF-alpha, TNFA, TNFSF2, TNLG1F}
- **Diseases:** Osteoarticular (MESH:D014394), cryptococcosis (MESH:D003453), hematologic cancer (MESH:D009369), pulmonary disease (MESH:D008171), diabetes (MESH:D003920), candidemia (MESH:D058387), meningitis (MESH:D008580), inflammation (MESH:D007249), injury to (MESH:D014947), cutaneous disease (MESH:D004194), skin lesions (MESH:D012871), sinusitis (MESH:D012852), alcohol abuse (MESH:D000437), infectious arthritis (MESH:D001170), aspergillosis (MESH:D001228), fungal disease (MESH:D009181), HIV infection (MESH:D015658), tenosynovitis (MESH:D013717), infectious (MESH:D003141), chronic (MESH:D002908), sepsis (MESH:D018805), Mucosal sporotrichosis (MESH:D013174), bacterial (MESH:D001424), granulomas (MESH:D006099), zoonosis (MESH:D015047), implantation mycosis (MESH:D015821), bacterial osteomyelitis (MESH:D010019), candidiasis (MESH:D002177), immune deficiencies (MESH:D007154), Infection (MESH:D007239), ulcers (MESH:D014456), ocular infections (MESH:D015817), immunodeficiencies (MESH:D007153), Death (MESH:D003643)
- **Chemicals:** oxytetracycline (MESH:D010118), Iodide (MESH:D007454), voriconazole (MESH:D065819), miconazole (MESH:D008825), benzathine (MESH:C010044), hydroxystilbamidine (MESH:C100274), levofloxacin (MESH:D064704), flucytosine (MESH:D005437), streptomycin (MESH:D013307), Azoles (MESH:D001393), isoniazid (MESH:D007538), albuterol (MESH:D000420), mapharsen (MESH:C100059), aureomycin (MESH:D002751), neomycin sulfate (MESH:D009355), itraconazole (MESH:D017964), steroids (MESH:D013256), Polyenes (MESH:D011090), Amphotericin B (MESH:D000666), dexamethasone (MESH:D003907), rifampicin (MESH:D012293), prednisolone (MESH:D011239), Sabouraud dextrose agar (-), penicillin (MESH:D010406), Potassium iodide (MESH:D011193)
- **Species:** Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (no rank) [taxon 11676], Sporothrix brasiliensis (species) [taxon 545650], Sporothrix globosa (species) [taxon 545651], Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast, species) [taxon 4932], Sporothrix schenckii (species) [taxon 29908], Aspergillus (genus) [taxon 5052], Sporothrix luriei (species) [taxon 284543], Cryptococcus (genus) [taxon 79213], Candida [taxon 1535326], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Sphaerochaeta globosa (species) [taxon 1131703], Felis catus (cat, species) [taxon 9685]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12941687/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12941687