| Literature DB >> 22518160 |
Kathleen T Montone1, Virginia A Livolsi, Michael D Feldman, James Palmer, Alexander G Chiu, Donald C Lanza, David W Kennedy, Laurie A Loevner, Irving Nachamkin.
Abstract
Fungal Rhinosinusitis (FRS) is a well known entity, but only in more recent times have the types of FRS been more fully defined. In this study, we evaluate the diagnosis of FRS in a single medical center. Cases were divided into 2 main categories, non-invasive and invasive. Non-invasive FRS included fungus ball (FB) and allergic fungal rhinosinusitis (AFRS). Invasive FRS included acute invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (AIFRS), chronic invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (CIFRS), and chronic invasive granulomatous fungal rhinosinusitis (CGFRS). Fungal culture data, if available was reviewed. 400 patients with FRS were identified. 87.25% were non-invasive (45% AFRS, 40% FB, and 2% combined AFRS and FB and 12.5% were invasive 11% AIFRS 1.2% CIFRS 0.5% CGFRS. One patient (0.25%) had combined FB/CGFRS. Aspergillus sp. or dematiaceous species were the most common fungi isolated in AFS while Aspergillus sp. was most common in FB and AIFRS. In our experience, most FRS is non-invasive. In our patient population, invasive FRS is rare with AIFRS representing >90% of cases. Culture data supports that a variety of fungal agents are responsible for FRS, but Aspergillus sp. appears to be one of the most common organisms in patients with FRS.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22518160 PMCID: PMC3299344 DOI: 10.1155/2012/684835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Otolaryngol ISSN: 1687-9201
Classification of fungal rhinosinusitis.
| Histopathologic Criteria | |
|---|---|
| Non-invasive FRS | |
| Fungus ball (FB) | An entangled mass on fungi with Minimal surrounding inflammatory reaction or surrounding fibrinous necrotic exudate containing fungal forms; no tissue invasion or granulomatous reaction is present |
| Allergic fungal rhinosinusitis (AFRS) | The presence of eosinophilic mucin (mucinous material admixed with eosinophils, acute inflammatory cells, eosinophilic debris, and Charcot-Leyden crystals; sparse fungi or positive fungal cultures; no tissue invasion present) |
| Mixed FB/AFRS | The presence of features of both AFRS and FB |
|
| |
| Invasive FRS | |
| Acute (AIFRS) | Invasion of fungal forms into submucosal with frequent angioinvasion and necrosis in a patient with symptoms of less than one-month duration |
| Chronic (CIFRS) | Invasion of fungal forms into submucosal often with surrounding chronic inflammation and fibrosis in patient with long-standing symptoms (>3-month duration) |
| Chronic granulomatous (CGFRS) | Invasion of fungal forms into submucosal often with surrounding chronic inflammation, fibrosis, and granuloma production in patient with long-standing symptoms (>3-month duration) |
|
| |
| Mixed Non-invasive/invasive FRS | A mixture of either of the invasive and non-invasive categories |
Classification of FRS in 400 patients.
| Classification | Diagnosis | No. of patients | Total no. of patients | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-invasive | 349 | 87.25% | ||
| AFS | 180 | 45.0% | ||
| FB | 161 | 40.25% | ||
| Combined AFRS/FB | 8 | 2.0% | ||
|
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| Invasive | 50 | 12.5% | ||
| Acute | 44 | 11.0% | ||
| Chronic | 4 | 1.0% | ||
| Chronic granulomatous | 2 | 0.5% | ||
|
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| Non-invasive/invasive | 1 | |||
| Combined FB/chronic granulomatous | 1 | 0.25% | ||
Clinical summary of FRS patients.
| Diagnosis | Avg. age (range) | M : F | No. | No. with cultures (% positive) | Most common isolates (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FB | 55 (18–90) | 1 : 2 | 161 | 107 (51%) |
|
| AFRS | 45 (18–88) | 1.2 : 1 | 180 | 142 (89%) | Dematiaceous fungi (36%) |
|
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| AIFRS | 54 (24–82) | 1.5 : 1 | 44 | 27 (67%) |
|
|
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| CIFRS | 48 (21–65) | 1 : 1 | 4 | 2 (100%) |
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| CGFRS | 58 (50–66) | 1 : 1 | 2 | 1 (100%) |
|
Figure 1High power of fungus ball showing entangled masses of fungal organisms (original magnification ×200).
Fungal Cultures in 161 Patients with FB.
| Single fungal isolate (95.8%) | Culture result | Overall % | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||
|
| 44.8% | ||
|
| 14.0% | ||
|
| 7.0% | ||
|
| |||
| Dematiaceous |
| ||
|
| 5.0% | ||
|
| 2.0% | ||
|
| 2.0% | ||
|
| |||
| Other |
| ||
|
| 5.0% | ||
|
| 2.0% | ||
|
| 2.0% | ||
| Nonsporulating mold | 2.0% | ||
|
| 5.0% | ||
|
| 5.0% | ||
|
| |||
| Multiple Fungal Isolates (4.2%) | |||
|
| 0.6% | ||
|
| 1.2% | ||
|
| 0.6% | ||
|
| 0.6% | ||
|
| 0.6% | ||
|
| 0.6% | ||
Figure 2(a) Histologic appearances of EM with lamellated appearance of mucin admixed with eosinophils and eosinophilic debris (original magnification ×200). (b) Rare fungal forms present in EM in patient with AFRS which grew Aspergillus sp. in culture (original magnification ×200).
Fungal isolates in 127 AFRS patients.
| Overall % | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Single Fungal Isolate |
| ||
|
| 34% | ||
|
| 41% | ||
|
| 25% | ||
|
| 22% | ||
|
| 3% | ||
|
| 9% | ||
| Dematiaceous | 30% | ||
|
| 35% | ||
|
| 22% | ||
|
| 4% | ||
|
| 35% | ||
|
| 4% | ||
|
| 5% | ||
|
| 6% | ||
|
| 5% | ||
|
| 5% | ||
|
| 5% | ||
|
| 6% | ||
|
| 2% | ||
| Mold, NOS | 2% | ||
| Multiple fungal isolates |
| ||
| Dematiaceous species/non- | 34% | ||
|
| 23% | ||
| Multiple | 16% | ||
| Multiple dematiaceous | 14% | ||
| Non dematiaceous | 13% |
Fungal culture Results in 81 AFRS patients with EM and fungi seen microscopically.
| Overall % | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Single isolate |
| ||
|
| 35% | ||
| Dematiaceous species | 36% | ||
| Other single isolate | 13% | ||
|
| 6% | ||
|
| 3% | ||
|
| 1% | ||
| Multiple isolates |
| ||
| Dematiaceous species | 8% | ||
| Dematiaceous species | 7% | ||
|
| 1% |
Fungal Culture Growth in 46 Patients With EM Without Fungal Organisms but with Positive Cultures.
| Overall % | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Single isolate |
| ||
|
| 24% | ||
| Dematiaceous species | 10% | ||
| Non- | 66% | ||
|
| 17% | ||
| Yeast, not | 14% | ||
|
| 17% | ||
|
| 3% | ||
|
| 3% | ||
|
| 3% | ||
| Mold not further specified | 10% | ||
| Multiple isolates |
| ||
| Multiple dematiaceous species | 12% | ||
| Dematiaceous species | 17% | ||
| Dematiaceous species | 41% | ||
|
| 12% | ||
| Non-dematiaceous species/non- | 17% |
Figure 3CGFS with granulomatous inflammation (a) and Grocott silver stain showing fungal organisms (b) (original magnification ×400 for (a) and ×400 for 3b).
Figure 4CIFS in showing chronic inflammation and fibrosis of the sinonasal mucosa (a) and fungal forms without angioinvasion invading into the sinonasal tissue on Grocott silver stain. (original magnification ×200).
Positive culture results in 18 AIFS patients.
| Overall % | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| 49% | |
|
| 56% | |
|
| 33% | |
| Aspergillus, NOS | 11% | |
|
| 33% | |
|
| 6% | |
|
| 6% | |
|
| 6% |
Figure 5Fungal organisms invading into a large artery in a patient with AIFRS. Culture grew Rhizopus sp. (original magnification ×400).