Dimorphic fungi: Difference between revisions

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*Fungi that exist in a mold form at lower temperatures in the environment, and a yeast form at higher temperatures in the host body
*[[Cryptococcus]] does exhibit dimorphism, though it is predominately yeast and its dimorphism is not likely related to disease

{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
!Organism
!Organism
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!Treatment
!Treatment
|-
|-
|[[Blastomyces species]]
|[[Blastomyces]]
|eastern US and Canada, with some reported in Africa
|eastern US and Canada, with some reported in Africa
|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection
|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection
|[[itraconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] induction if severe)
|[[itraconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] induction if severe)
|-
|-
|[[Coccidioides species]]
|[[Coccidioides]]
|southwestern US and parts of South and Central America
|southwestern US and parts of South and Central America
|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection
|pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection
|[[fluconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] and [[flucytosine]] induction if severe)
|[[fluconazole]] (with [[amphotericin B]] and [[flucytosine]] induction if severe)
|-
|-
|[[Histoplasma|Histoplasma capsulatum]]
|[[Histoplasma capsulatum]]
|worldwide, including eastern North America, Central and South America, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of Southeast Asia
|worldwide, including eastern North America, Central and South America, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of Southeast Asia
|pulmonary infection, CNS infection
|pulmonary infection, CNS infection
Line 38: Line 35:
|[[amphotericin B]] induction followed by [[itraconazole]]
|[[amphotericin B]] induction followed by [[itraconazole]]
|}
|}
==Distribution==
==Background==
===Microbiology===

*Broad category of fungi that exist in a mold form at lower temperatures in the environment, and a yeast form at higher temperatures in the host body
*[[Cryptococcus]] does exhibit dimorphism, though it is predominately yeast and its dimorphism is not likely related to disease
*Often referred to as endemic fungi based on their geographic niches
*Includes the following genera and species:
**[[Blastomyces]], including Blastomyces dermatitidis complex ([[Blastomyces dermatitidis]] and [[Blastomyces gilchristii]]), helices, silverae, parvus
**[[Histoplasma capsulatum]] (var. ''capsulatum'' and var. ''duboisii'')
**[[Coccidiodes]], including [[Coccidioides immitis]] and [[Coccidioides posadasii]]
**[[Paracoccidioides]], including [[Paracoccidioides brasiliensis]] and [[Paracoccidioides lutzii]]
**[[Talaromyces marneffei]]
**[[Emergomyces]], including [[Emergomyces pasteurianus]], [[Emergomyces africanus]], [[Emergomyces orientalis]], [[Emergomyces canadensis]], [[Emergomyces europaeus]]
**[[Sporothrix]] complex (Sporothrix brasiliensis, Sporothrix schenckii, Sporothrix globose, Sporothrix luriei)

===Epidemiology===


*Endemic dimorphic fungi are widely distributed[[CiteRef::PMID32040709]]
*Endemic dimorphic fungi are widely distributed[[CiteRef::PMID32040709]]


[[File:Histoplasmosis_map.png|frame|Histoplasmosis]]
====Histoplasmosis====

[[File:Histoplasmosis_map.png|Histoplasmosis|alt=|thumb|300x300px]]

*High-endemic areas include Ohio and Mississippi river valley systems, but also in Central and South America
**However, 12-20% of cases in US occur outside of endemic areas
**In Canada, mostly along St. Lawrence seaway and Great Lakes drainage
*More recently, cases have been diagnosed in Alberta and Saskatchewan
*Also found in Asia and Africa, throughout, with var. duboisii in West Africa (mostly skin and soft tissue disease)
*Associated with soil contaminated by bird or bat guano

====Coccidiomycosis====

[[File:Coccidiomycosis_map.png|Coccidiomycosis|alt=|thumb|300x300px]]

*More common in southwestern US, especially California and Arizona (but up to Washington state), as well as parts of South and Central America
**Concentrated heavily in San Joaquin Valley in California
*Present in soil
*High-risk activities: construction, military maneuvers, earthquakes/landslides, armadillo hunting, prisoners from other parts of the US that are incarcerated in California

====Blastomycosis====

[[File:Blastomycosis_map.png|Blastomycosis|alt=|thumb|300x300px]]

*Found mostly in eastern North America
**In Canada, found in northwestern Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan
***Kenora is the hotspot in Canada
*More common in wooded areas, damp soil, and near waterways
*High-risk activities include excavation and construction

====Emergomycosis====

*Different species found worldwide, including [[Emergomyces canadensis]] in Saskatchewan, Colorado, and New Mexico
*More common in HIV patients or other immunocompromised

==Clinical Manifestations==

===Histoplasmosis===
{| class="wikitable"
!
!Acute Pulmonary
!Cavitary and Chronic Pulmonary
!Progressive Disseminated
|-
|Clinical
|usually asymptomatic or mild; can have non-pleuritic chest pain from mediastinal or hilar lymphadenopathy; can have rheumatic features or pericarditis
|8% develop fibrocavitary disease, associated with underlying [[COPD]]
|
|-
|Immunology
|>90% positive skin test, 20% urine antigen
|75-95% antibodyes, 40% urine antigen
|60-90% urine antigen
|-
|Culture
|<25% positive
|5-70% positive (more likely if cavitary)
|50-70% positive
|}

===Blastomycosis===

*Inhalation is main portal of entry
*Incubation 3 weeks to 3 months
*In outbreaks, 50% of exposed developed symptoms
*Primarily presents with pulmonary blastomycosis with influenza-like illness, acute pneumonia, ARDS, or chronic pneumonia
*Skin is most common extrapulmonary site, but can also infect bone and prostate
*CNS infection is rare

===Coccidiomycosis===

*Asymptaomtic common in 60%
*Early pulmonary infection
**Mild
**Valley fever, including arthralgias and erythema nodosum
*Extrapulmonary dissemination
**More common in African Americans

===Emergomycosis===

*Cutaneous disease in immunocompromised patients, especially advanced HIV
*Can also cause pulmonary disease, extrapulmonary disease, or disseminated

==Diagnosis==

*Notify laboratory if a [[Biosafety risk groups|risk group 3]] organism is suspected
*For blood cultures, the isolator system is preferred to BacTAlert
*Media
**Brain-heart infusion with sheep blood plus antibacterials is preferred
**Cycloheximide can be used to prevent growth of saprophytic molds (always with one plate without)
**Incubate at 30ºC to enhance growth of mold forms
**Incubated for 3 weeks for fungi in general, but should be extended to 4 weeks for dimorphic fungi
***[[Coccidioides]] is the fastest-growing, within 3 to 5 days on SAB, and can grow on chocolate and sheep's blood agars

{| class="wikitable"
!Organism
!Findings on Microscopy
|-
|[[Histoplasma]]
|intracellular 2-4 μm yeast-like cells in macrophages, may have narrow-based budding
|-
|[[Blastomyces]]
|8-15 μm yeast-like cells with broad-based budding, refractile thick cell wall, but early spherules can be confused with [[Coccioides]]
|-
|[[Coccidioides]]
|spherules are thick-walled, 10-80 μm with endospores; alternating barrel-shaped arthroconidia in mycelial form
|-
|[[Marneffei]]
|divides by binary fission
|-
|[[Emergomyces]]
|2.5-5 μm small yeast form with narrow-based budding; septate hyphae with conidiophores at right answers, with conidia clustered in florettes of 2 to 3 conidia
|}

===EORTC Definition[[CiteRef::donnelly2019re]]===

*'''Proven invasive fungal disease'''
**Histopathology or direct microscopy of sterile material of specimens obtained from an affected site showing the distinctive form of the fungus, or
**Recovery by culture of sterile material of the fungus from specimens from an affected site, or
**Blood culture that yields the fungus
*'''Probable invasive fungal disease'''
**Requires clinical features and mycologic evidence, but host does not have to be immunocompromised for dimorphic or endemic fungi
**Host factors: not applicable
**Clinical features: evidence for geographical or occupational exposure (including remote) to the fungus and compatible clinical illness
**Mycological evidence:
***[[Histoplasma]] or [[Blastomyces]] antigen in urine, serum, or body fluid
***Antibody to [[Coccidioides]] in CSF or 2-fold rise in 2 consecutive serum samples

==Prevention==

===Laboratory Safety===


*Many are [[Biosafety risk groups|risk group 3]] and need to notify lab if suspected
[[File:Coccidiomycosis_map.png|frame|Coccidiomycosis]]
*Opening the plates outside of a BSC is one of the highest risk actions


[[Category:Fungi]]
[[File:Blastomycosis_map.png|frame|Blastomycosis]]

Latest revision as of 21:09, 7 March 2024

Organism Distribution Diseases Treatment
Blastomyces eastern US and Canada, with some reported in Africa pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection itraconazole (with amphotericin B induction if severe)
Coccidioides southwestern US and parts of South and Central America pulmonary infection, verrucous skin lesions, osteomyelitis, CNS infection fluconazole (with amphotericin B and flucytosine induction if severe)
Histoplasma capsulatum worldwide, including eastern North America, Central and South America, sub-Saharan Africa, and parts of Southeast Asia pulmonary infection, CNS infection itraconazole (with amphotericin B induction if severe)
Paracoccidioides brasiliensis South America pulmonary infection itraconazole (with amphotericin B induction if severe)
Sporothrix schenckii essentially worldwide nodular lymphangitis itraconazole
Talaromyces marneffei Southeast Asia disseminated (common in advanced HIV), pulmonary infection, abdominal abscess, skin lesions, osteomyelitis amphotericin B induction followed by itraconazole

Background

Microbiology

Epidemiology

  • Endemic dimorphic fungi are widely distributed1

Histoplasmosis

Histoplasmosis
  • High-endemic areas include Ohio and Mississippi river valley systems, but also in Central and South America
    • However, 12-20% of cases in US occur outside of endemic areas
    • In Canada, mostly along St. Lawrence seaway and Great Lakes drainage
  • More recently, cases have been diagnosed in Alberta and Saskatchewan
  • Also found in Asia and Africa, throughout, with var. duboisii in West Africa (mostly skin and soft tissue disease)
  • Associated with soil contaminated by bird or bat guano

Coccidiomycosis

Coccidiomycosis
  • More common in southwestern US, especially California and Arizona (but up to Washington state), as well as parts of South and Central America
    • Concentrated heavily in San Joaquin Valley in California
  • Present in soil
  • High-risk activities: construction, military maneuvers, earthquakes/landslides, armadillo hunting, prisoners from other parts of the US that are incarcerated in California

Blastomycosis

Blastomycosis
  • Found mostly in eastern North America
    • In Canada, found in northwestern Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan
      • Kenora is the hotspot in Canada
  • More common in wooded areas, damp soil, and near waterways
  • High-risk activities include excavation and construction

Emergomycosis

  • Different species found worldwide, including Emergomyces canadensis in Saskatchewan, Colorado, and New Mexico
  • More common in HIV patients or other immunocompromised

Clinical Manifestations

Histoplasmosis

Acute Pulmonary Cavitary and Chronic Pulmonary Progressive Disseminated
Clinical usually asymptomatic or mild; can have non-pleuritic chest pain from mediastinal or hilar lymphadenopathy; can have rheumatic features or pericarditis 8% develop fibrocavitary disease, associated with underlying COPD
Immunology >90% positive skin test, 20% urine antigen 75-95% antibodyes, 40% urine antigen 60-90% urine antigen
Culture <25% positive 5-70% positive (more likely if cavitary) 50-70% positive

Blastomycosis

  • Inhalation is main portal of entry
  • Incubation 3 weeks to 3 months
  • In outbreaks, 50% of exposed developed symptoms
  • Primarily presents with pulmonary blastomycosis with influenza-like illness, acute pneumonia, ARDS, or chronic pneumonia
  • Skin is most common extrapulmonary site, but can also infect bone and prostate
  • CNS infection is rare

Coccidiomycosis

  • Asymptaomtic common in 60%
  • Early pulmonary infection
    • Mild
    • Valley fever, including arthralgias and erythema nodosum
  • Extrapulmonary dissemination
    • More common in African Americans

Emergomycosis

  • Cutaneous disease in immunocompromised patients, especially advanced HIV
  • Can also cause pulmonary disease, extrapulmonary disease, or disseminated

Diagnosis

  • Notify laboratory if a risk group 3 organism is suspected
  • For blood cultures, the isolator system is preferred to BacTAlert
  • Media
    • Brain-heart infusion with sheep blood plus antibacterials is preferred
    • Cycloheximide can be used to prevent growth of saprophytic molds (always with one plate without)
    • Incubate at 30ºC to enhance growth of mold forms
    • Incubated for 3 weeks for fungi in general, but should be extended to 4 weeks for dimorphic fungi
      • Coccidioides is the fastest-growing, within 3 to 5 days on SAB, and can grow on chocolate and sheep's blood agars
Organism Findings on Microscopy
Histoplasma intracellular 2-4 μm yeast-like cells in macrophages, may have narrow-based budding
Blastomyces 8-15 μm yeast-like cells with broad-based budding, refractile thick cell wall, but early spherules can be confused with Coccioides
Coccidioides spherules are thick-walled, 10-80 μm with endospores; alternating barrel-shaped arthroconidia in mycelial form
Marneffei divides by binary fission
Emergomyces 2.5-5 μm small yeast form with narrow-based budding; septate hyphae with conidiophores at right answers, with conidia clustered in florettes of 2 to 3 conidia

EORTC Definition2

  • Proven invasive fungal disease
    • Histopathology or direct microscopy of sterile material of specimens obtained from an affected site showing the distinctive form of the fungus, or
    • Recovery by culture of sterile material of the fungus from specimens from an affected site, or
    • Blood culture that yields the fungus
  • Probable invasive fungal disease
    • Requires clinical features and mycologic evidence, but host does not have to be immunocompromised for dimorphic or endemic fungi
    • Host factors: not applicable
    • Clinical features: evidence for geographical or occupational exposure (including remote) to the fungus and compatible clinical illness
    • Mycological evidence:

Prevention

Laboratory Safety

  • Many are risk group 3 and need to notify lab if suspected
  • Opening the plates outside of a BSC is one of the highest risk actions

References

  1. ^  Ashraf N, Kubat RC, Poplin V, Adenis AA, Denning DW, Wright L, McCotter O, Schwartz IS, Jackson BR, Chiller T, Bahr NC. Re-drawing the Maps for Endemic Mycoses.. Mycopathologia. 2020. doi:10.1007/s11046-020-00431-2. PMID 32040709.