| Literature DB >> 34970462 |
Zachary Ciochetto1,2, Maria Georgen1,2, Adam Hadro1,2, Lauren Jurkowski1,2, Kimberly Ridolfi2, Adam Wooldridge1,2, Nathan Gundacker1,2, Javeria Haque1,2.
Abstract
Coccidioides is an endemic fungus in the Southwestern United States and Central and South America. Coccidioidomycosis primary infections are typically of the lung with an asymptomatic or self-limiting course. Some infections disseminate to other parts of the body and a few can remain latent for many years. Reactivation of latent fungal disease can occur following an insult to the host immune system. Here, we describe a case of a 76-year-old Caucasian male patient who moved from California to Wisconsin with a history of coccidioidomycosis infection of the left knee that reactivated decades later in his prosthetic knee shortly after being initiated on ibrutinib (Imbruvica), a Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor, for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL). There have been some case reports regarding coccidioidomycosis infections after initiating ibrutinib therapy but none with a 50 year latency period before reactivation. Readers will learn the immunological effects of ibrutinib on the hosts' innate and adaptive immunity and its role in putting the host at risk for invasive fungal infections. We also review the literature and data on treatment regimens and recommendations based on current guidelines.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34970462 PMCID: PMC8714342 DOI: 10.1155/2021/3964465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Hematol ISSN: 2090-6579
Figure 1Coccidioides immitis under 10x magnification.
Figure 2Coccidioides immitis gross visualization on culture media plates.
Reported coccidioidomycosis native and prosthetic joint infections and their treatments.
| Source | Case | Site of infection | Native vs. prosthetic | Type of surgery | Treatment course | Treatment response |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taxy et al. [ | Ankle | Native | None | Oral fluconazole × 14 months | Successful | |
| Ellerbrook et al. [ | Knee | Native | Debridement | Oral fluconazole 600 mg/d indefinitely | Successful | |
| Weisenberg [ | Knee | Native | Debridement, extensive synovectomy, and meniscectomy | Oral flucaonazole 800 mg/d × 5 months and then itraconazole 200 mg/d indefinitely | Successful | |
| Arbeloa-Gutierrez et al. [ | Knee | Prosthetic | Prosthesis removal with amphotericin spacer and knee fusion | Oral itraconazole indefinitely | Successful | |
| Austen et al. [ | Knee | Prosthetic | None | Oral fluconazole 800 mg/d × 4 months and then 400 mg/d indefinitely | Successful | |
| Kuberski et al. [ | 1 | Knee | Prosthetic | Debridement, prosthesis removal, and knee fusion | Oral fluconazole 200 mg BID indefinitely | Successful |
| 2 | Knee | Native | Synovectomy and total knee replacement | IV amphotericin (total 1000 mg) and then oral fluconazole 200 mg BID indefinitely | Successful | |
| 3 | Knee | Native | None | IV amphotericin (total 1000 mg) and then oral fluconazole 400 mg/d indefinitely | Unsuccessful | |
| 4 | Bilateral knees and ankles | Native | Right knee debridement | IV amphotericin (total 920 mg) and then oral itraconazole indefinitely | Unsuccessful | |
| 5 | Hip | Prosthetic | None | Oral fluconazole 800 mg/d indefinitely | Successful | |
| 6 | Knee | Native | Synovectomy and total knee replacement | Oral fluconazole 400 mg/d indefinitely | Unknown | |
| Nasrawi et al. [ | Wrist, knee, and ankle | Native | None | IV amphotericin × 12 weeks and then isavuconazonium indefinitely | Unknown |