Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2012 Dec;55(11):1441-9. doi: 10.1093/cid/cis749. Epub 2012 Oct 5.
Major advances in combat casualty care have led to increased survival of patients with complex extremity trauma. Invasive fungal wound infections (IFIs) are an uncommon, but increasingly recognized, complication following trauma that require greater understanding of risk factors and clinical findings to reduce morbidity.
The patient population includes US military personnel injured during combat from June 2009 through December 2010. Case definition required wound necrosis on successive debridements with IFI evidence by histopathology and/or microbiology (Candida spp excluded). Case finding and data collected through the Trauma Infectious Disease Outcomes Study utilized trauma registry, hospital records or operative reports, and pathologist review of histopathology specimens.
A total of 37 cases were identified: proven (angioinvasion, n=20), probable (nonvascular tissue invasion, n=4), and possible (positive fungal culture without histopathological evidence, n=13). In the last quarter surveyed, rates reached 3.5% of trauma admissions. Common findings include blast injury (100%) during foot patrol (92%) occurring in southern Afghanistan (94%) with lower extremity amputation (80%) and large volume blood transfusion (97.2%). Mold isolates were recovered in 83% of cases (order Mucorales, n=16; Aspergillus spp, n=16; Fusarium spp, n=9), commonly with multiple mold species among infected wounds (28%). Clinical outcomes included 3 related deaths (8.1%), frequent debridements (median, 11 cases), and amputation revisions (58%).
IFIs are an emerging trauma-related infection leading to significant morbidity. Early identification, using common characteristics of patient injury profile and tissue-based diagnosis, should be accompanied by aggressive surgical and antifungal therapy (liposomal amphotericin B and a broad-spectrum triazole pending mycology results) among patients with suspicious wounds.
在创伤救治方面取得的重大进展,使复杂四肢创伤患者的存活率提高。侵袭性真菌感染(IFI)是创伤后一种少见但日益受到关注的并发症,需要更多地了解其危险因素和临床特征,以降低发病率。
患者人群包括 2009 年 6 月至 2010 年 12 月期间在战斗中受伤的美军人员。病例定义要求在连续清创过程中出现伤口坏死,并通过组织病理学和/或微生物学检查(排除念珠菌属)发现IFI 证据。通过创伤传染病结局研究发现病例并收集数据,该研究利用了创伤登记系统、医院记录或手术报告,以及病理学家对组织病理学标本的审查。
共发现 37 例病例:确诊(血管侵袭,20 例)、可能(非血管组织侵袭,4 例)和疑似(真菌培养阳性但无组织病理学证据,13 例)。在最后一个季度的调查中,创伤患者的发病率达到 3.5%。常见的发现包括脚部巡逻时(92%)发生的爆炸伤(100%),这些事件发生在阿富汗南部(94%),导致下肢截肢(80%)和大量输血(97.2%)。83%的病例中分离出霉菌(霉菌纲,16 例;曲霉菌属,16 例;镰刀菌属,9 例),感染伤口中常见多种霉菌(28%)。临床结局包括 3 例相关死亡(8.1%)、频繁清创(中位数 11 例)和截肢翻修(58%)。
IFI 是一种新兴的与创伤相关的感染,会导致严重的发病率。使用患者损伤特征和基于组织的诊断的常见特征,早期识别,并对可疑伤口患者进行积极的外科和抗真菌治疗(两性霉素 B 脂质体和广谱三唑类药物,等待真菌学结果),可以降低发病率。