Volume 30, Number 2—February 2024
CME ACTIVITY - Synopsis
Multicenter Retrospective Study of Invasive Fusariosis in Intensive Care Units, France
Table 3
Infections and co-infections | No. (%) patients | |
---|---|---|
Fusariosis diagnosis | ||
Probable | 32 (58) | |
Proven |
23 (42) |
|
Fusarium species | ||
Fusarium spp. | 38 (69) | |
F. oxysporum | 5 (9) | |
F. proliferatum | 4 (7) | |
F. solani | 3 (5) | |
F. fujikuroi | 2 (4) | |
F. dimerum | 1 (2) | |
F. monoliforme | 1 (2) | |
F. keratoplasticum |
1 (2) |
|
Mycologic diagnosis | ||
Mycologic culture of biologic samples* | 55 (100) | |
Pathologic examination of biopsies† | 10 (18) | |
Positive serum galactomannan |
15 (27) |
|
Time of diagnosis from intensive care admission | ||
Before admission | 12 (22) | |
Day of admission | 12 (22) | |
After admission |
29 (53) |
|
Clinical manifestation | ||
Disseminated infection | 12 (22) | |
Skin lesions | 14 (25) | |
Pneumonia | 42 (76) | |
Sinusitis | 3 (5) | |
Arthritis | 3 (5) | |
Infection of pancreatic fluid collections |
1 (2) |
|
Thoracic computed tomography patterns of pneumonia, n = 37 | ||
Pulmonary consolidations | 16 (43) | |
Nodules and micronodules | 12 (32) | |
Excavated pulmonary lesions | 3 (8) | |
Ground glass opacities | 9 (24) | |
Pleural effusion | 6 (16) | |
Missing data |
5 (14) |
|
Co-infections | ||
Bacterial | 32 (58) | |
Viral | 19 (35) | |
Fungal |
27 (49) |
|
Antifungal treatment‡ | ||
Monotherapy | 46 (84) | |
Voriconazole | 23 (42) | |
Amphotericin B | 21 (38) | |
Isavuconazole | 1 (2) | |
Terbinafine | 1 (2) | |
Combination therapy | ||
Voriconazole + amphotericin B | 11 (20) | |
Isavuconazole + micafungin | 1 (2) | |
None | 4 (7) | |
Missing data |
1 (2) |
|
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor |
12 (22) |
|
Surgical debridement of localized infection |
7 (13) |
|
Response to therapy | ||
Progression | 28 (51) | |
Partial or complete | 14 (25) | |
Missing data | 13 (24) |
*Biologic samples included blood cultures, skin biopsies, sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, sinus aspirate samples, joint fluid, and pancreatic fluid collections. †Pathologic examination of skin or sinus biopsies in which Fusarium are seen and accompanied by tissue damage. ‡Some patients first received a monotherapy and then a combination of 2 drugs because of refractory disease.
Page created: November 30, 2023
Page updated: January 22, 2024
Page reviewed: January 22, 2024
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