Marukutira Tafireyi, Huprikar Shirish, Azie Nkechi, Quan Shun-Ping, Meier-Kriesche Herwig-Ulf, Horn David L
Botswana-Baylor Children's Clinical Centre of Excellence, Gaborone, Botswana, USA.
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
HIV AIDS (Auckl). 2014 Mar 13;6:39-47. doi: 10.2147/HIV.S53910. eCollection 2014.
This analysis aimed to characterize the epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes of invasive fungal infections (IFIs) in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Data were examined for HIV patients enrolled in the Prospective Antifungal Therapy (PATH) Alliance registry, a multicenter, observational study of patients with IFIs in North America from 2004 to 2008. Patient demographics, clinical characteristics, comorbidities, antifungal therapies, and survival were assessed. In total, 320 fungal isolates were identified from 303 HIV patients with IFIs in the PATH Alliance® registry. These included Cryptococcus (50.0%), Candida (33.1%), Histoplasma (9.1%), and Aspergillus (4.4%). Candida infection occurred mainly as candidemia (86.0%); Cryptococcus as central nervous system infection (76.7%); Histoplasma as disseminated infection (74.1%); and Aspergillus as pulmonary infection (81.8%). The CD4 cell count was ≤200 cells/μL in 91.2% of patients with available data. The majority of patients with Cryptococcus (77.9%), Histoplasma (100.0%), and Aspergillus (71.4%) infections had CD4 cell counts <50 cells/μL compared with 48.9% of patients with Candida infections. Patients with candidiasis were more likely to have other conditions requiring medical services compared with patients with other IFIs. Survival probability was lower in patients with Aspergillus (0.58) and Candida (0.59) infection than in patients with Histoplasma (0.84) and Cryptococcus (0.81) infection. In the highly active antiretroviral therapy era, traditional opportunistic IFIs such as cryptococcosis and histoplasmosis still mainly occur in HIV patients with CD4 counts <50 cells/μL. Fungal infections remain a clinical challenge in HIV patients with severe immunosuppression. Our data also suggest that HIV patients with CD4 cell counts >200 cells/μL and other underlying conditions may be susceptible to invasive candidiasis.
本分析旨在描述人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)患者侵袭性真菌感染(IFI)的流行病学、诊断、治疗及转归情况。对参与前瞻性抗真菌治疗(PATH)联盟登记研究的HIV患者数据进行了分析,该研究是一项2004年至2008年在北美开展的针对IFI患者的多中心观察性研究。评估了患者的人口统计学特征、临床特征、合并症、抗真菌治疗及生存情况。在PATH联盟登记研究中,共从303例患有IFI的HIV患者中鉴定出320株真菌分离株。其中包括隐球菌(50.0%)、念珠菌(33.1%)、组织胞浆菌(9.1%)和曲霉菌(4.4%)。念珠菌感染主要表现为念珠菌血症(86.0%);隐球菌感染主要为中枢神经系统感染(76.7%);组织胞浆菌感染主要为播散性感染(74.1%);曲霉菌感染主要为肺部感染(81.8%)。在有可用数据的患者中,91.2%的患者CD4细胞计数≤200个/μL。与48.9%的念珠菌感染患者相比,大多数隐球菌(77.9%)、组织胞浆菌(100.0%)和曲霉菌(71.4%)感染患者的CD4细胞计数<50个/μL。与其他IFI患者相比,念珠菌病患者更可能患有其他需要医疗服务的疾病。曲霉菌(0.58)和念珠菌(0.59)感染患者的生存概率低于组织胞浆菌(0.84)和隐球菌(0.81)感染患者。在高效抗逆转录病毒治疗时代,隐球菌病和组织胞浆菌病等传统机会性IFI仍主要发生在CD4细胞计数<50个/μL的HIV患者中。真菌感染仍是严重免疫抑制HIV患者面临的临床挑战。我们的数据还表明,CD4细胞计数>200个/μL且有其他基础疾病的HIV患者可能易患侵袭性念珠菌病。