Fungemia

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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
  • Can be complicated by endophthalmitis
  • In patients with community-onset candidemia and candiduria, many have fungal endocarditis

Prognosis

  • Mortality of about 25%1

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
  • Antifungal therapy

References

  1. a b  Andre N. Sofair, G. Marshall Lyon, Sharon Huie‐White, Errol Reiss, Lee H. Harrison, Laurie Thomson Sanza, Beth A. Arthington‐Skaggs, Scott K. Fridkin. Epidemiology of Community‐Onset Candidemia in Connecticut and Maryland. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 2006;43(1):32-39. doi:10.1086/504807.
  2. ^ lashof2011oc