| Literature DB >> 32614267 |
Wei Liu1,2, Ruizhi Feng1, Hongli Jiang1.
Abstract
The Scedosporium apiospermum complex is a group of emerging opportunistic fungal pathogens that affect both immunocompromised and immunocompetent individuals, most commonly via lung infection. Although they are resistant to many antifungal agents, this group of pathogens has a favorable susceptibility profile to azoles, especially voriconazole. Here, we describe the management of S. apiospermum infection in an otherwise healthy 44-year-old woman. She had exhibited intermittent hemoptysis for 2 years before admission to our hospital. Computed tomography revealed a thin-walled and well-circumscribed cavitary lesion in the left upper lobe; the lesion was filled with consolidative opacities. Fungal culture of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid specimens revealed grayish-white mold; lactophenol cotton blue staining revealed acute angle branched septate hyaline cylindrical hyphae, characteristic of S. apiospermum. Despite voriconazole 200 mg twice daily for 8 weeks, the patient showed no improvement; thus, her left upper lobe was removed via thoracoscopic surgery. Her symptoms immediately improved and chest radiography after surgical resection showed no evidence of radiological progression or reoccurrence. This report demonstrates that S. apiospermum lung infection may not respond well to voriconazole alone in immunocompetent hosts; thus, surgery could be curative for these patients.Entities:
Keywords: Scedosporium apiospermum; antifungal therapy; immunocompetent; pulmonary fungal infection; surgery; voriconazole
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32614267 PMCID: PMC7333505 DOI: 10.1177/0300060520931620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Med Res ISSN: 0300-0605 Impact factor: 1.671
Figure 1.Initial chest computed tomography scans. (a) Axial and (b) sagittal planes show a thin-walled and well-circumscribed cavitary lesion filled with consolidative opacities on the left upper lobe, accompanied by minor bronchial dilation and bilateral inflammatory shadows.
Figure 2.Fungal culture and staining findings. (a) Sabouraud dextrose agar culture shows growth of grayish-white colonies and grayish-black reverse (i.e., underside of agar). (b) Lactophenol cotton blue preparation shows hyaline branching septate hyphae with single conidia present on tips of erect conidiophores (×400 magnification).
Figure 3.Chest computed tomography scans before surgery.
Figure 4.Gross anatomical and histopathological findings. (a) Mass removed by video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. (b) Histopathological staining of resected lung tissue shows thin, delicate, septate hyphae branching at acute angles (Gomori-methenamine silver stain, ×400 magnification).
Figure 5.Chest computed tomography scans show no radiological progressions or reoccurrence at 3 (a), 6 (b), and 12 (c) months after surgery.