| Literature DB >> 21750627 |
Jane Kriengkauykiat1, James I Ito, Sanjeet S Dadwal.
Abstract
Over the past 20 years, the number of invasive fungal infections has continued to persist, due primarily to the increased numbers of patients subjected to severe immunosuppression. Despite the development of more active, less toxic antifungal agents and the standard use of antifungal prophylaxis, invasive fungal infections (especially invasive mold infections) continue to be a significant factor in hematopoietic cell and solid organ transplantation outcomes, resulting in high mortality rates. Since the use of fluconazole as standard prophylaxis in the hematopoietic cell transplantation setting, invasive candidiasis has come under control, but no mold-active antifungal agent (except for posaconazole in the setting of acute myelogenous leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome) has been shown to improve the survival rate over fluconazole. With the advent of new azole and echinocandin agents, we have seen the emergence of more azole-resistant and echinocandin-resistant fungi. The recent increase in zygomycosis seen in the hematopoietic cell transplantation setting may be due to the increased use of voriconazole. This has implications for the empiric approach to pulmonary invasive mold infections when zygomycosis cannot be ruled out. It is imperative that an amphotericin B product, an antifungal that has never developed resistance in over 50 years, be initiated. The clinical presentations of invasive mold infections and invasive candidiasis can be nonspecific and the diagnostic tests insensitive, so a high index of suspicion and immediate initiation of empiric therapy is required. Unfortunately, our currently available serologic tests do not predict infection ahead of disease, and, therefore cannot be used to initiate "preemptive" therapy. Also, the Aspergillus galactomannan test gives a false negative result in patients receiving antimold prophylaxis, ie, virtually all of our patients with hematologic malignancy and hematopoietic cell transplant recipients. We may eventually be able to select patients at highest risk for invasive fungal infections for prophylaxis by genetic testing. However, with our current armamentarium of antifungal agents and widespread use of prophylaxis in high-risk groups (hematologic malignancy, hematopoietic cell transplantation), we continue to see high incidence and mortality rates, and our future hope lies in reversing the immunosuppression or augmenting the immune system of these severely immunocompromised hosts by developing and utilizing immunotherapy, immunoprophylaxis, and vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: antifungal agents; immunosuppression; invasive fungal infections
Year: 2011 PMID: 21750627 PMCID: PMC3130903 DOI: 10.2147/CLEP.S12502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epidemiol ISSN: 1179-1349 Impact factor: 4.790
Proportion of invasive fungal infections reported in the literature
| HCT | 43% | 8% | 28% | 15% | |
| SOT | 18.8% | 2.3% | 52.9% | 19% | |
| HM | 33%–69% | – | 13.5%–44% | – | |
| ICU | 11% | – | 79% | 10% |
Abbreviations: HCT, hematopoietic cell transplantation; HM, hematologic malignancy; IA, invasive aspergillosis; IC, invasive candidiasis; ICU, intensive care unit; SOT, solid organ transplantation.
Risk factors for invasive fungal infections
| IFI | Host predisposition |
| Neutropenia ≥3 weeks | |
| Environmental factors | |
| IA | GVHD (acute grades 2–4 or chronic) |
| HCT type (mismatched-related donor at greatest risk) | |
| Underlying hematologic disease (MDS or AML) | |
| Corticosteroid (dose and duration) | |
| T cell-depleting therapy | |
| CMV infection | |
| Ganciclovir use | |
| Polymorphisms (TLR4, TNF, or IL-10) | |
| HCT in nonlaminar air flow room | |
| IC | Colonization |
| Presence of central venous catheter | |
| Hemodialysis | |
| Surgery (complicated or repeated abdominal) | |
| Clinical unstable presentation (acute renal failure, shock, disseminated intravascular coagulation) | |
| Antianerobic antibiotic agents | |
| Total parental nutrition or intralipid agents | |
| Prolonged ICU stay |
Abbreviations: AML, acute myelogenous leukemia; CMV, cytomegalovirus; GVHD, graft versus host disease; HCT, hematopoietic cell transplantation; HM, hematologic malignancy; IA, invasive aspergillosis; IC, invasive candidiasis; ICU, intensive care unit; IFI, invasive fungal infection; IL-10, interleukin-10; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; SOT, solid organ transplantation; TLR4, toll-like receptor 4; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.
Antifungal agents: uses, pros, and cons
| Polyenes | Salvage therapy and empiric use due to broad activity | Nephrotoxicity and infusion reactions are the largest drawbacks |
| Fluconazole | IC in stable patients or stepdown agents; prophylaxis in HCT; no need to monitor blood levels | No mold activity |
| Itraconazole | May be used as stepdown therapy where other azoles are unavailable or intolerant in IC or invasive aspergillosis; should monitor blood levels | Limited usefulness, other agents may be preferred: variable oral absorption, food and pH-dependent, side effect profile (GI, cardiac, hepatic) |
| Voriconazole | First-line therapy in invasive aspergillosis; IC in stable patients or stepdown therapy | IV formulation contraindicated in renal impairment CrCl ≤ 50 mL/min; side effect profile (rash, visual, hepatic, cardiac); DDI; associated emergence of zygomycosis; need to monitor blood levels |
| Posaconazole | Prophylaxis in HCT/HM; salvage therapy for IFI (eg, zygomycosis) | Absorption dependent on high fat meals; side effect profile (hepatic, cardiac although least toxic of azoles after fluconazole); oral formulation only; need to monitor blood levels |
| Echinocandins | Primary indication for IC; micafungin for prophylaxis in HCT; caspofungin for empiric therapy in febrile neutropenia; salvage therapy for invasive aspergillosis; potential addition for combination therapy; few side effects or DDI | Not for primary monotherapy in invasive aspergillosis |
| Flucytosine | Used in combination with other antifungal agents in IC | Marrow toxic; only oral formulation available |
Abbreviations: CrCl, creatinine clearance; DDI, drug-drug interactions; GI, gastrointestinal; HCT, hematopoietic cell transplantation; HM, hematologic malignancy; IA, invasive aspergillosis; IC, invasive candidiasis; IFI, invasive fungal infection.