| Literature DB >> 33923333 |
Romaric Larcher1,2, Laura Platon1, Matthieu Amalric1, Vincent Brunot1, Noemie Besnard1, Racim Benomar1, Delphine Daubin1, Patrice Ceballos3, Philippe Rispail4, Laurence Lachaud4,5, Nathalie Bourgeois4,5, Kada Klouche1,2.
Abstract
Comprehensive data on emerging invasive fungal infections (EIFIs) in the critically ill are scarce. We conducted a case-control study to characterize EIFIs in patients admitted to a French medical ICU teaching hospital from 2006 to 2019. Among 6900 patients, 26 (4 per 1000) had an EIFI: Mucorales accounted for half, and other isolates were mainly Saprochaete, Fusarium and Scedosporium. EIFIs occurred mostly in patients with immunosuppression and severe critical illness. Antifungal treatments (mainly amphotericin B) were administered to almost all patients, whereas only 19% had surgery. In-ICU, mortality was high (77%) and associated with previous conditions such as hematological malignancy or cancer, malnutrition, chronic kidney disease and occurrence of acute respiratory distress syndrome and/or hepatic dysfunction. Day-90 survival rates, calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method, were similar between patients with EIFIs and a control group of patients with aspergillosis: 20%, 95% CI (9- 45) versus 18%, 95% CI (8- 45) (log-rank: p > 0.99). ICU management of such patients should be assessed on the basis of underlying conditions, reversibility and acute event severity rather than the mold species.Entities:
Keywords: Chaetomium; Fusarium; Saccharomyces; Saprochaete; Scedosporium; Trichosporon; intensive care unit; invasive fungal infections; mucormycosis; outcome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33923333 DOI: 10.3390/jof7050330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X