“…Although C. auris, in addition to fungemia, has also been implicated to cause ventriculitis, pericarditis, complicated pleural effusions and intra-abdominal infections, osteomyelitis, malignant otitis/otomastoiditis, meningitis and vulvovaginitis, its role in respiratory, urinary and skin and soft tissue infections remains uncertain [30,33,34,43,48,50,60,74,89,139,167,168]. Due to its multidrug-resistant nature and extraordinary ability to spread rapidly in healthcare facilities causing outbreaks with associated high mortality rates [30,[42][43][44][45][51][52][53][54][55][56][57][58], the detection of even a single case of C. auris should trigger an epidemiological investigation and the implementation of infection control measures and contact precautions to prevent further transmission [77,78,141]. This requires the capacity of hospital microbiology laboratory to efficiently and correctly identify C. auris and, following the detection of positive cases, the institution of robust infection control measures which include alerting treating infectious disease specialists and notification to institutional authorities for setting up outbreak management teams.…”