| Literature DB >> 19337433 |
Rafael Zaragoza1, Javier Pemán, Miguel Salavert, Angel Viudes, Amparo Solé, Isidro Jarque, Emilio Monte, Eva Romá, Emilia Cantón.
Abstract
The high morbidity, mortality, and health care costs associated with invasive fungal infections, especially in the critical care setting and immunocompromised host, have made it an excellent target for prophylactic, empiric, and preemptive therapy interventions principally based on early identification of risk factors. Early diagnosis and treatment are associated with a better prognosis. In the last years there have been important developments in antifungal pharmacotherapy. An approach to the new diagnosis tools in the clinical mycology laboratory and an analysis of the use new antifungal agents and its application in different clinical situations has been made. Furthermore, an attempt of developing a state of the art in each clinical scenario (critically ill, hematological, and solid organ transplant patients) has been performed, trying to choose the best strategy for each clinical situation (prophylaxis, pre-emptive, empirical, or targeted therapy). The high mortality rates in these settings make mandatory the application of early de-escalation therapy in critically ill patients with fungal infection. In addition, the possibility of antifungal combination therapy might be considered in solid organ transplant and hematological patients.Entities:
Keywords: empirical therapy; invasive fungal infections; preemptive treatment; prophylaxis; targeted therapy
Year: 2008 PMID: 19337433 PMCID: PMC2643107 DOI: 10.2147/tcrm.s3994
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Figure 1Different antifungal strategies for treatment in invasive fungal infections based on diagnostic stage.
Usual susceptibility patterns for yeasts and moulds
| Species | Amphotericin B | Fluconazole | Itraconazole | Voriconazole | Posaconazole | Echinocandins |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sa | S | S | S | S | S | |
| S | S | S | S | S | S | |
| S | S | S | S | S | S | |
| S, R | SDD, R | SDD, R | S | S | S | |
| S, R | R | SDD, R | S | S | S | |
| S, R | S | S | S | S | S | |
| S, R | S, SDD | S | S | S | ||
| S, R | S, SDD, R | S | S | S | ||
| S, R | S, SDD, R | S, SDD | S | R | ||
| S, R | S, SDD, R | S, SDD | S | R | ||
| S, R | S | S | S | ND | ||
| S | S, SDD | S, SDD | S, SDD | R | ||
| S | S, SDD | S | S | S | R | |
| S | R | S, R | S | S | S | |
| R | R | S | S | S | S | |
| S | R | S | S | S | S | |
| S | R | S | S | S | S | |
| R | R | R | S | S | R | |
| R | R | R | S | S | S | |
| R | R | R | R | R | R | |
| Zygomycetes | S | R | R | R | S | R |
Notes:S, susceptible; I, intermediate; R, resistant; SDD, susceptibility depends on the dose; ND, no data.
Susceptible, but few clinical data are available.
10%–15% of C. glabrata isolates are resistant to fluconazole.
Resistant to itraconazole ~50% and ~30% of C. glabrata and C. krusei isolates, respectively.
20% of isolates are resistant to amphotericin B.
Antifungal therapy strategies in ICU patients
| Strategy | Antifungal agent | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prophylaxis | No generally recommended. Patients with upper gastrointestinal perforation, heavy | Fluconazole | |
| Empirical | Use of “ | De-escalation therapy (*), the choice of antifungal drug must be based on the individual characteristics of the patient | |
| Pre-emptive | Based on detection of galactomannan, (1,3)-β- | De-escalation therapy (*), the choice of antifungal drug must be based on the individual characteristics of the patient | |
| Targeted | Based on sterile site culture results | De-escalation therapy (*), the choice of antifungal drug must be based on the individual characteristics of the patient (**) |
Notes:An early broad-spectrum antifungal agent is initially prescribed, switching to a narrower-spectrum drug (fluconazole) when mycological identification and susceptibility studies are provided.
Focus on the presence of renal or hepatic failure, hemodynamic instability and possible interactions with other drugs.
Antifungal therapy strategies in hematological patients
| Strategy | Antifungal agent | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prophylaxis | High risk patients*: | Itraconazole or Posaconazole or Voriconazole | |
| Intermediate risk patients**: | Fluconazole | ||
| Empirical | Severely neutropenic cancer patients with persistent or relapsing fever despite broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy | Liposomal AmB or Caspofungin | |
| Pre-emptive | Based on GM assays or CT or bronchoscopic cultures | Liposomal AmB or Caspofungin or Voriconazole | |
| Targeted | Based on sterile site culture results | Voriconazole Combination therapy |
Notes:Acute leukemia patients, Allogenic HSCT recipients, autologous HSCT recipients, previous episode of IFI, rescue chemotherapy for acute leukemia patients and severe aplastic anemia.
Autologous HSCT recipients, acute linfoblastic leukemia, rescue therapy for myeloma and lymphomas.
Antifungal therapy strategies in lung transplantation (LT) recipients
| Strategy | Antifungal agents | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prophylaxis | Generally recommended in the postoperative period | Voriconazole or Amphotericin B (intravenous or aerosolized) | |
| Pre-emptive | Patients with pre- and/or post-transplant fungal airway colonization
| Voriconazole or Amphotericin B (intravenous or aerosolized) | |
| Targeted | Based on sterile site culture results or non-absolutely sterile samples (respiratory specimens) processed by semi or quantitative methods and considered clinically significant
| Voriconazole or Amphotericin B or Echinocandins
|
Antifungal therapy strategies in recipients of nonpulmonary solid organ transplantation (NP-SOT)
| Strategy | Antifungal agents | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Universal prophylaxis is not recommended
| Oral prophylaxis with nonabsorbable antifungal agents (nystatin, clotrimazole, amphotericin B) has shown inconsistent results.
| ||
| Strategy not sufficiently validated in these patients
| Azoles or Amphotericin B | ||
| Based on sterile site culture results or nonabsolutely sterile samples (respiratory specimens) processed by semi or quantitative methods and considered clinically significant
| Azoles or Amphotericin B or Echinocandins
|
Etiological and clinical characteristics of IFI according to the type of SOT
| Type of transplant | Incidence of IFI (%) | Usual etiologic agent (s) | Variables portending higher risk of IA | Mortality(%) of IA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Renal | 0–20 | 76%–95% | Graft failure requiring hemodialysis, high level and prolonged duration of corticosteroids | 77 |
| Heart | 5–20 | 70%–90% | Isolation of | 78 |
| Liver | 5–40 | 35%–0% | Retransplantation, renal failure (particularly requiring renal replacement therapy), fulminant hepatic failure as an indication for transplantation, primary allograft failure, high transfusion requirements, use of monoclonal antibodies, | 87 |
| Lung/Heart–Lung | 10–45 | 43%–72% | Single lung transplant, CMV infection, rejection and augmented immunosuppression, obliterative bronchitis, | 68 |
| Pancreas (+kidney) | 10–40 | >90% | Similar factors to the liver and kidney transplant, graft lost (vascular graft thrombosis, post-reperfusion pancreatitis), enteric drainage, alemtuzumab-containing immunosuppresive regimen | 100 |
| Small bowel | 30–60 | 80%–100% | Not clearly determined, similar factors to others intraabdominal SOT recipients; Graft rejection/dysfunction, enhanced immunosuppression, anastomotic disruption, multi-visceral transplant | 66 |
Abbreviations: SOT, solid organ transplantation/solid organ transplant recipients; IFI, invasive fungal infection; IA, invasive aspergillosis; CMV, cytomegalovirus.