| Literature DB >> 36178544 |
Alexandra Mpakosi1,2, Maria Siopi3, Georgia Vrioni4, Maria Orfanidou5, Athina Argyropoulou6, Myrto Christofidou7, Maria Kostoula8, Stamatina Golegou9, Anastasia Antoniadou1, Eleni Vagiakou5, Eleni Petrou5, Evangelia Platsouka10, Eleni Papadogeorgaki11, Joseph Meletiadis3, Irini Chatziralli12, Panagiotis Theodossiadis12, Georgios Petrikkos1,13, Maria Drogari-Apiranthitou14.
Abstract
In a multicenter, prospective study of filamentous fungal keratitis in Greece, predisposing factors, etiology, treatment practices, and outcome, were determined. Corneal scrapings were collected from patients with clinical suspicion of fungal keratitis, and demographic and clinical data were recorded. Fungal identification was based on morphology, molecular methods, and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass-spectrometry. A total of 35 cases were identified in a 16-year study period. Female to male ratio was 1:1.7 and median age 48 years. Corneal injury by plant material, and soft contact lens use were the main risk factors (42.8% and 31.4%, respectively). Trauma was the leading risk factor for men (68.1%), contact lens use (61.5%) for women. Fusarium species were isolated more frequently (n = 21, 61.8%). F. solani was mostly associated with trauma, F. verticillioides and F. proliferatum with soft contact lens use. Other fungi were: Purpureocillium lilacinum (14.7%), Alternaria (11.8%), Aspergillus (8.8%), and Phoma foliaceiphila, Beauveria bassiana and Curvularia spicifera, one case each. Amphotericin B and voriconazole MIC50s against Fusarium were 2 mg/L and 4 mg/L respectively. Antifungal therapy consisted mainly of voriconazole locally or both locally and systemically, alone or in combination with liposomal AmB. Cure/improvement rate with antifungal therapy alone was 52%, keratoplasty was required in 40% of cases, and enucleation in 8%. In conclusion, filamentous fungal keratitis in Greece is rare, but with considerable morbidity. A large proportion of cases resulted in keratoplasty despite appropriate antifungal treatment.Kindly confirm the given name and family name are correctly identified for all authros.ConfirmedJournal instruction requires a city and country for affiliations; however, these are missing in affiliations 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 13. Please verify if the provided city and country are correct and amend if necessary.All provided cities and countries are correct.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Filamentous fungi; Fungal keratitis; Fusarium; Greece; Purpureocillium lilacinum
Year: 2022 PMID: 36178544 DOI: 10.1007/s11046-022-00666-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycopathologia ISSN: 0301-486X Impact factor: 3.785