| Literature DB >> 34947071 |
Ana Álvarez-Uría1,2, Pilar Escribano1,2, Verónica Parra-Blanco3, José Francisco Cano-Lira4, Alberto Miguel Stchigel4, Gillen Oarbeascoa2,5, Patricia Muñoz1,2,6,7, Jesús Guinea1,2,6.
Abstract
The etiological agents of infrequent invasive fungal infections (IFI) are difficult to identify on the species level using classic morphological examination. We describe the first case of an IFI caused by Cephalotrichum gorgonifer in a neutropenic patient with a hematological malignancy and put it on the map as a new causative agent of IFI. Case report, microbiological findings and description of the etiological agent. A 60-year-old man was diagnosed with mantle cell lymphoma. A CT scan confirmed the presence of lung infiltrates located at the right upper lobe. Histological examination of one of the nodules showed a large number of narrow septate hyphae with acute-angle branching and irregular round cell morphology; vessels walls appeared infiltrated, proving an angioinvasive pulmonary IFI. Sample culture resulted positive and molecular identification proved the presence of Cephalotrichum gorgonifer. Voriconazole was used for 12 months and the patient did not report any complications or side effects. Complete remission of lymphoma was achieved later by the time chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and radioimmunotherapy consolidation were completed. We recommend the inclusion of Cephalotrichum gorgonifer in the list of opportunistic pathogens causing mycoses in neutropenic hematological patients with suspected mould-related IFI.Entities:
Keywords: Cephalotrichum gorgonifer; diagnosis; invasive fungal infection; molecular identification; neutropenia
Year: 2021 PMID: 34947071 PMCID: PMC8703546 DOI: 10.3390/jof7121089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Lung tissue sections and histological examination showing the presence of septate hyphae, some causing angioinvasion. ((A) Grocott stain, magnification 200×) and ((B) PAS staining, magnification 400×).
Figure 2Cephalotrichum gorgonifer on potato dextrose agar plates after 10 days of incubation at 35 °C.
Figure 3Typical morphology of Cephalotrichum gorgonifer. The main image shows two synnemata with long rhizoids (black arrow) and a head ornamented with curled setae (white arrow). The small image shows the conidia, which are one-celled, pale brown, smooth-/thick-walled, and ellipsoidal conidia pointed at the apex and truncated at the base.