Background
Microbiology
Risk Factors
Hospital-onset
Community-onset1
Hospitalization within the past month
HIV, malignancy, neutropenia, and diabetes similar to hospital-onset
Less immunosuppressive therapy, recent surgery, or central venous catheters than hospital-onset, but still risk factors
Clinical Manifestations
Positive blood culture for a Candida species
Fever
Triad of bowel perforation, increase white cell count, and decreased platelets
Ocular infections in 16%, which as primarily chorioretinitis , although endophthalmitis is possible2
Fungal endocarditis found in 8%
In patients with community-onset candidemia and candiduria, many have fungal endocarditis
Prognosis
Investigations
Blood cultures
Blood count (increased WBCs, decreased platelets)
Consider echo to rule out endocarditis
Management
Never treat as a contaminant!
Requires ophthalmology consult to rule out endophthalmitis , ideally around 1 week after positive cultures
Repeat 1 to 2 blood cultures every 24 to 48 hours until negative (1 culture q24h in ESCMID guidelines)
Antifungal therapy
Duration
No organ involvement: 14 days from first negative
Ocular infection: until resolution of ocular findings, often 4 to 6 weeks
Endocarditis: at least 6 weeks; see fungal endocarditis
References
a b Andre N. Sofair, G. Marshall Lyon, Sharon HuieâWhite, Errol Reiss, Lee H. Harrison, Laurie Thomson Sanza, Beth A. ArthingtonâSkaggs, Scott K. Fridkin. Epidemiology of CommunityâOnset Candidemia in Connecticut and Maryland. Clinical Infectious Diseases . 2006;43(1):32-39. doi :10.1086/504807 . ^ lashof2011oc