| Literature DB >> 32021322 |
Tiantian Li1, Junqin Shi1, Fei Xu1, Xiaoling Xu1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To analyze the clinical characteristics of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) in renal transplant recipients, identify early sensitivity indicators, and optimize clinical strategies. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed clinical data for 24 patients with confirmed PCP who underwent renal transplantation (RT) between 2010 and 2019, encompassing a mean follow-up of 29 (range, 11-49) d.Entities:
Keywords: Pneumocystis jirovecii; clinical characteristics; optimize clinical strategies; renal transplantation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32021322 PMCID: PMC6955634 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S234039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Demographic Characteristics, Symptoms, Auxiliary Examination, and Treatment of 24 Patients with PCP After RT
| Characteristic | Values |
|---|---|
| 39 ± 7 (29–57) | |
| Male | 16/24 (67%) |
| Female | 8/24 (33%) |
| Hypertension | 6/24 (25%) |
| Diabetes | 3/24 (13%) |
| Heart disease | 2/24 (8%) |
| Mycophenolate mofetil + tacrolimus + glucocorticoid | 8/24 (33%) |
| Mycophenolate mofetil +cyclosporine + glucocorticoid | 16/24 (67%) |
| ≤6 month | 17/24 (71%) |
| 6–12 month | 5/24 (21%) |
| ≥12 month | 2/24 (8%) |
| Progressive dyspnea | 19 (79%) |
| Fever | 18 (75%) |
| Dry cough | 16 (67%) |
| Expectoration | 7 (29%) |
| >96% | 11/24 (46%) |
| 91–96% | 6/24 (25%) |
| <91% | 7/24 (29%) |
| Diffuse ground-grass shadows | 24/24 (100%) |
| Air bronchogram | 4/24 (17%) |
| Pleural effusion | 4/24 (17%) |
| Pleural thickening | 1/24 (4%) |
| Multiple nodules | 1/24 (4%) |
| 1,3-β-D-glucan >10 pg/mL | 259.16 ± 392.34 pg/mL (16/20, 80%) |
| C-reactive protein >8 mg/L | 37.85 (52.55) mg/L (15/20, 75%) |
| Percentage of neutrophils >75% | 82.4 (15.9)% |
| White blood cell count >9.5 × 109/L | 8.11 ± 4.30 × 109/L |
| Procalcitonin >0.5 ng/mL | 0.16 (0.49) ng/mL |
| Percentage of CD4+ T cells <28.5% | 34.6 ± 11.9% |
| Percentage of CD3+ T cells <59.4% | 76.98 ± 11.08% |
| Cytomegalovirus | 2/18 (11%) |
| Klebsiella pneumoniae | 2/16 (13%) |
| Acinetobacter baumannii | 1/16 (6%) |
| Pseudomonas aeruginosa | 1/16 (6%) |
| Bronchoalveolar lavage | 14/17 (82%) |
| Induced sputum | 9/11 (82%) |
| Sputum smears | 1/24 (4%) |
| 17 ± 7 (5–33) | |
| ≤14 d | 8/24 (33%) |
| 14–21 d | 10/24 (42%) |
| ≥21 d | 6/24 (25%) |
| 14,644.73 ± 11,101.59 | |
| ≤10,000 RMB | 8/24 (33%) |
| 10,000–20,000 RMB | 10/24 (42%) |
| ≥20,000 RMB | 6/24 (25%) |
| Nasal oxygen breath | 19/24 (79%) |
| Mask oxygen | 2/24 (8%) |
| Noninvasive ventilation | 1/24 (4%) |
| Invasive ventilation | 1/24 (4%) |
| Extracorporeal membrane oxygen | 1/24 (4%) |
| Recovery | 20/24 (83%) |
| Death | 4/24 (17%) |
Figure 1Computed tomography (CT) showed ground-glass opacities in the apexes of both lungs in the initial phase of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP). (A) A 31-year-old male patient underwent parental-origin renal transplantation (RT) after 3 years of hemodialysis, and PCP occurred 7 months after RT. In the early stages, CT showed ground-glass opacities in the apexes of both lungs. (B) A 37-year-old female patient underwent RT after 8 years of hemodialysis, and PCP occurred 3 months after surgery. CT showed a decrease in the transmittance of the two lungs, and diffuse, plaque-like, and strip-like opacities were seen in both apexes. (C) A 30-year-old male patient underwent RT after 1 year of hemodialysis, and PCP occurred 3 months after RT. CT showed increased clouding and ground-glass opacities in the apexes of both lungs, and the edges were unclear. (D) A 39-year-old male patient underwent RT after 5 years of hemodialysis, and PCP occurred 3 months after surgery. CT showed ground-glass and strip-like, high-density shadows scattered across the apexes of both lungs.
Figure 2Lung CT showed diffuse, plaque-like, ground-glass opacities in both lungs. (A) A 37-year-old male patient underwent RT after 4 years of hemodialysis, and PCP occurred 4 months after surgery. CT showed plaque-like, grid-like, high-density shadows and clouding in both lung fields, with blurred edges. (B) A 40-year-old female patient underwent RT after 1 year of peritoneal dialysis, and PCP occurred 5 months after surgery. CT showed increased multiple plaque-like opacities in the lungs, and the edges were unclear. (C) A 36-year-old male patient underwent RT after 1 year of hemodialysis, and PCP occurred 3 months after surgery. CT showed diffuse, ground-glass, high-density shadows in both lungs, with unclear edges. (D) A 34-year-old male patient underwent RT after 2 years of hemodialysis, and PCP occurred 4 months after surgery. CT showed scattered, plaque-like opacities in both lungs with unclear edges.