Invasive fungal infection
From IDWiki
Microbiology
- Endemic fungi
- Other fungi
- Molds
- Yeasts
- Excludes Pneumocystis
Epidemiology
- Among patients on posaconazole for a hematologic malignancy or bone marrow transplant, there is an approximately 2% rate of breakthrough infection 1
Classification (excluding endemic fungi)
Probable invasive pulmonary mold disease
- The classification for probable invasive pulmonary mold disease requires at least one patient risk factor (host factor), one clinical criterion (e.g. imaging), and one mycological criterion 2
- Host factors
- Recent history of neutropenia (<0.5 × 109 neutrophils/L for >10 days) temporally related to the onset of fungal disease
- Hematologic malignancy (active, in treatment, or recent)
- Receipt of an allogeneic stem cell transplant
- Prolonged use of corticosteroids (excluding ABPA) at a mean minimum dose of 0.3 mg/kg/day of prednisone equivalent for ≥3 weeks in the past 60 days
- Treatment with other recognized T-cell immunosuppressants, such as calcineurin inhibitors, TNF-α inhibitors, specific monoclonal antibodies (such as alemtuzumab), or nucleoside analogues during the past 90 days
- Treatment with certain B-cell immunosuppressants, including ibrutinib
- Inherited severe immunodeficiency, such as chronic granulomatous disease, STAT 3 deficiency, or severe combined immunodeficiency
- Acute graft-versus-host disease grade III or IV, involving gut, lungs, or liver, which is refractory to first-line steroids
- Clinical criteria
- Pulmonary aspergillosis: any of the following patterns on CT
- Dense, well-circumscribed lesions with or without a halo sign
- Air crescent sign
- Cavity
- Wedge-shaped and segmental or lobar consolidation
- Other pulmonary mold disease: as above, but also including a reverse halo sign
- Tracheobronchitis: tracheobronchial ulceration, nodule, pseudomembrane, plaque, or eschar seen on bronchoscopic analysis
- Sinonasal infection:
- Acute localized pain (including pain radiating to the eye)
- Nasal ulcer with black eschar
- Extension from the paranasal sinus across bony barriers, including into the orbit
- CNS infection: 1 of the following 2 signs
- Focal lesions on imaging
- Meningeal enhancement on MRI or CT
- Pulmonary aspergillosis: any of the following patterns on CT
- Mycological criteria
- Direct test (cytology, direct microscopy, or culture)
- Mold in sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, bronchial brush, or sinus aspirate samples, indicated by 1 of the following:
- Presence of fungal elements indicating a mold
- Recovery by culture of a mold (e.g., Aspergillus, Fusarium, Zygomycetes, or Scedosporium species)
- Tracheobronchitis
- Aspergillus species on BAL or bronchial brush culture
- Microscopy showing fungal elements on BAL or bronchial brush
- Sinonasal disease
- Mold on culture or microscopy of sinus aspirate
- For Aspergillus species
- Galactomannan in plasma, serum, BAL, or CSF
- Serum or plasma ≥1
- BAL ≥1
- Serum or plasma ≥0.7 and BAL ≥0.8
- CSF ≥1
- PCR
- Plasma, serum, or whole blood positive on 2 consecutive tests
- BAL positive on 2 or more tests
- At least 1 positive from plasma, serum, or whole blood and one positive from BAL
- Galactomannan in plasma, serum, BAL, or CSF
- Direct test (cytology, direct microscopy, or culture)
Proven
- Fungal elements in biopsy of diseased tissue, or highly specific indirect assays
- Includes:
- Aspergillus in culture
- Histoplasma capsulatum: intracellular budding yeasts
- Coccidioides species: spherules
- Paracoccidioides brasiliensis: large yeasts with multiple daughter yeasts in a “pilot-wheel configuration”
- Blastomyces dermatitidis: thick-walled, broad-based budding yeasts
- Can include Coccidioides antibodies in CSF, or Cryptococcus capsular antigen in CSF
- Does not include urine antigens
Probable
- Requires a susceptible host, clinical/radiographic features, and mycological evidence
Possible
- Only cases with the appropriate host factors and with sufficient clinical/radiographic evidence without supporting mycological evidence
- Not used for endemic fungi
References
- ^ Oliver A. Cornely, Johan Maertens, Drew J. Winston, John Perfect, Andrew J. Ullmann, Thomas J. Walsh, David Helfgott, Jerzy Holowiecki, Dick Stockelberg, Yeow-Tee Goh, Mario Petrini, Cathy Hardalo, Ramachandran Suresh, David Angulo-Gonzalez. Posaconazole vs. Fluconazole or Itraconazole Prophylaxis in Patients with Neutropenia. New England Journal of Medicine. 2007;356(4):348-359. doi:10.1056/nejmoa061094.
- ^ Ben De Pauw, Thomas J. Walsh, J. Peter Donnelly, David A. Stevens, John E. Edwards, Thierry Calandra, Peter G. Pappas, Johan Maertens, Olivier Lortholary, Carol A. Kauffman, David W. Denning, Thomas F. Patterson, Georg Maschmeyer, Jacques Bille, William E. Dismukes, Raoul Herbrecht, William W. Hope, Christopher C. Kibbler, Bart Jan Kullberg, Kieren A. Marr, Patricia Muñoz, Frank C. Odds, John R. Perfect, Angela Restrepo, Markus Ruhnke, Brahm H. Segal, Jack D. Sobel, Tania C. Sorrell, Claudio Viscoli, John R. Wingard, Theoklis Zaoutis, John E. Bennett. Revised Definitions of Invasive Fungal Disease from the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer/Invasive Fungal Infections Cooperative Group and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Mycoses Study Group (EORTC/MSG) Consensus Group. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 2008;46(12):1813-1821. doi:10.1086/588660.