You’re likely searching for Adobe here, which is a partial match for Esado within the authority’s name.
Ask Adobe support about their product, and why it’s having issues accessing the Keychain.
That Keychain access issue is entirely unrelated to the list of trusted root certificates, and searching for Adobe in the list of certificates authorities won’t get you any further than searching for “Adobe” in an architectural magazine. Though both can have partial or even complete word matches for the string “Adobe”.
You’re digging in the wrong spot for an Adobe-related Keychain access problem.
Certificate background…
Here is the list of certificate authorities included by Apple:
Available trusted root certificates for Apple operating systems - Apple Support
There are a great many entities that have received approval to create certificates, across various authorities and various browser vendors. The Autoridad de Certificacion Raiz del Estado Venezolano is included by Apple in its list of trusted certificate authorities. The Autoridad de Certificacion Raiz del Estado Venezolano is a Venezuelan certificate authority, and that root certificate is found across a number of providers and products and browsers.
If you’re interested in this topic, country-level providers are fairly common in some areas, and here’s a list for those in Hispanoamérica (en Español): https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anexo:Autoridades_de_certificación_por_pa%C3%ADs
With the now-mandatory-for-all-TLS certificates Certificate Transparency, creating sketchy certificates has gotten a little more difficult for all certificate providers.
But again, you have Creative Cloud, which likely means that you have some sort of Adobe support access , which means you’re best asking Adobe why they’re displaying a Keychain dialog.