| Literature DB >> 31261704 |
Niki R Jackson1, Janis E Blair1, Neil M Ampel2,3.
Abstract
Coccidioidomycosis is a common infection in the western and southwestern United States as well as parts of Mexico and Central and South America and is due to the soil-dwelling fungi Coccidioides. Central nervous system (CNS) infection is an uncommon manifestation that is nearly always fatal if untreated. The presentation is subtle, commonly with headache and decreased mentation. The diagnosis should be considered in patients with these symptoms in association with a positive serum coccidioidal antibody test. The diagnosis can only be established by analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which typically demonstrates a lymphocytic pleocytosis, hypoglycorrhachia, elevated protein, and positive CSF coccidioidal antibody. Cultures are infrequently positive but a proprietary coccidioidal antigen test has reasonable sensitivity. Current therapy usually begins with fluconazole at 800 mg daily but other triazole antifungals also have efficacy and are often used if fluconazole fails. Triazole therapy should be lifelong. Intrathecal amphotericin B, the original treatment, is now reserved for those in whom triazoles have failed. There are several distinct complications of CNS coccidioidal infection, the most common of which is hydrocephalus. This is nearly always communicating and requires mechanical shunting in addition to antifungal therapy. Other complications include cerebral vasculitis, brain abscess, and arachnoiditis. Management of these is difficult and not well established.Entities:
Keywords: Coccidioides; brain abscess; central nervous system; coccidioidomycosis; fungal infections; meningitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31261704 PMCID: PMC6787616 DOI: 10.3390/jof5030054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Summary of medications used for the treatment of central nervous system (CNS) coccidioidomycosis.
| Antifungal Agent | Typical Dose/Frequency | Notes | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Fluconazole | 400–800 mg orally daily | • absorbed well orally | • dosing to 1200 mg/daily can be considered if patient has a clinically inadequate response |
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| Itraconazole | 200 mg orally BID–TID |
requires acid for absorption acidic food/drink may improve absorption requires drug-level monitoring of itraconazole and hydroxyitraconazole combined total levels 3.0–6.0 µg/mL recommended |
numerous drug–drug interactions black box warning for patients with heart failure poor cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) penetration, but affinity for P-glycoprotein results in active efflux |
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| Voriconazole | 200–400 mg orally BID |
good oral bioavailability less CNS penetration compared with fluconazole target serum levels 3–6 µg/mL |
numerous drug–drug interactions expensive cutaneous phototoxicity reversible visual changes |
| Posaconazole | 300 mg daily as delayed-release (DR) preparation |
poor CNS penetration target of serum levels 3–6 µg/mL |
high protein binding but large volume of distribution serum levels > 5 may increase likelihood of toxicity inhibits renin–angiotensin–aldosterone axis in some patients |
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| IT amphotericin B deoxycholate (AMBd) |
escalated doses as tolerated: initiate dosing as 0.1 mg 3 times weekly gradual increase of dose by 0.1 mg as tolerated weekly dose escalation by >0.1 mg/dose may not be tolerated |
treatment of choice prior to established role of azoles currently used for azole failure |
nausea, vomiting, and headache are common premedication with acetaminophen, diphenhydramine, or ondansetron orally may be helpful concurrent IT corticosteroid reduces risk of arachnoiditis neurotoxic effects include ataxia, erectile dysfunction, hearing loss, ophthalmoplegia, neurogenic bladder, and paraplegia |
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| Dexamethasone | 20 mg daily × 7 days, then lower dose by 4 mg every other day | • may be useful in cases of vasculitis | |
IT, intrathecal; mg, milligram.