Elizabeth M. Johnson
Public Health England
81 Papers
393 Citations
Elizabeth M. Johnson is an academic researcher from Public Health England. The author has contributed to research in topics: Candida auris & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 81 publications. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth M. Johnson include University of Exeter & Bristol Royal Infirmary.
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Papers
Lobar Collapse and Obliteration of Air Bronchogram Allowing Early Diagnosis of Endobronchial Aspergillus Infection following Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation.
Elizabeth L. Thompson,Manigandan Thyagarajan,Elizabeth M. Johnson,David F. Weeden,Mary Morgan,Sarah J. Groves,Colin G. Steward +6 more
TL;DR: A 9-year-old girl who suffered extended neutropenia following graft failure after haematopoietic stem cell transplantation for severe aplastic anaemia is reported, being the first reported case of Aspergillus EBFI not to result in respiratory failure.
Fluconazole Resistance in Isolates of Uncommon Pathogenic Yeast Species from the United Kingdom.
Andrew M. Borman,Julian Muller,Jo Walsh-Quantick,Adrien Szekely,Zoe Patterson,Michael D. Palmer,Mark Fraser,Elizabeth M. Johnson +7 more
TL;DR: The importance of rapid and accurate yeast identification is underscored and may aid clinicians dealing with infections with rarer yeasts to decide whether fluconazole would be appropriate as a second-line treatment option for invasive Candida infections.
COVID-19 associated invasive aspergillosis: data from the UK National Mycology Reference Laboratory.
Andrew M. Borman,Andrew M. Borman,Michael D. Palmer,Mark Fraser,Zoe Patterson,Ciara Mann,Debra Oliver,Christopher J. Linton,Martin Gough,Phillipa Brown,Agnieszka Dzietczyk,Michelle Hedley,Sue McLachlan,Julie King,Elizabeth M. Johnson,Elizabeth M. Johnson +15 more
TL;DR: The results highlight the challenges in biomarker-driven diagnosis of CAPA, especially when only limited clinical samples are available for testing, and the importance of a multimodal diagnostic approach involving regular and repeat testing of both serum and respiratory samples.