| Literature DB >> 1431256 |
S Kusne1, J Torre-Cisneros, R Mañez, W Irish, M Martin, J Fung, R L Simmons, T E Starzl.
Abstract
From January 1981 to December 1990, 2180 patients underwent orthotopic liver transplantation at the University of Pittsburgh. Thirty-two patients (1.5%) were identified with invasive aspergillosis (29 lung, 2 intraabdominal, 1 meningitis). Of 29 patients with invasive lung disease, only 23 (79%) had positive culture (Aspergillus fumigatus, 20; Aspergillus flavus, 3). Forty-eight variables were analyzed and compared in 23 patients with invasive disease with positive cultures and 9 patients with colonization only. The variables associated with pulmonary invasive disease, by univariate analysis, were surgical time (P = .03), presence of laparotomies (P = .02), higher creatinine level at time of Aspergillus isolation (P = .01), and use of OKT3 (P = .02). However, in a multivariate analysis, only the last two (creatinine, OKT3) were associated with invasive lung aspergillosis. Of 4 patients with positive abdominal wound culture, 2 had local invasive aspergillosis. Therefore, positive cultures of Aspergillus organisms from respiratory secretions and wound drainage may represent invasive disease and should not be ignored.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1992 PMID: 1431256 PMCID: PMC3022485 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/166.6.1379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226