Morrison V A, Haake R J, Weisdorf D J
Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota Health Sciences Center, Minneapolis.
Medicine (Baltimore). 1993 Mar;72(2):78-89. doi: 10.1097/00005792-199303000-00002.
We evaluated a consecutive series of patients who underwent bone marrow transplantation (BMT) at a single institution between 1974 and 1989 for the occurrence of a non-Candida fungal infection in the first 180 days after BMT. Of the 1186 patients, 129 (11%) patients developed a total of 138 significant non-Candida fungal infections in this period. Eight patients had multiple distinct infections. The most common isolate was Aspergillus spp. (n = 97), followed by Fusarium (n = 10), and Alternaria (n = 6). The 4 clinical subtypes of infections were minor skin or soft-tissue infections (n = 7), infections of a single organ or site (n = 61), disseminated fungal infection (n = 58), and isolated fungemia (n = 12). The respiratory tract was involved in 95% of single organ or site infections, and 84% of disseminated infections. Outcome was poor, with only 18% of patients surviving. The cause of death was directly related to the non-Candida fungal infection in 66% of patients who died. Mortality rates were significantly higher in patients with either single-organ or site infections (41%) or disseminated infections (83%). The cause-specific mortality rate was greatest following infections with Aspergillus, Chrysosporium, Fusarium, Mucor, or Scopulariopsis, in which there was a high potential for invasive disease and disseminated infection. In contrast, the cause-specific mortality rate was lowest in infections which were either isolated fungemia or were localized and amenable to surgical debridement, most often seen with those infections caused by Acremonium, Alternaria, Penicillium, and Saccharomyces. The spectrum of clinical infections caused by these uncommon non-Candida fungal isolates both in our series and in the literature is reviewed. These unusual opportunistic fungal isolates are now gaining recognition in immunosuppressed patients such as the BMT population, and have a significant impact on patient outcome. Effective therapy of non-Candida fungal infections remains difficult. Early aggressive surgical debridement appears to be important in control of localized invasive infections. Prolonged therapy with amphotericin B is the standard of care, although the role of the newer antifungal agents is not yet well-defined. Ancillary roles may also be provided by granulocyte transfusions and the colony-stimulating factors.
我们评估了1974年至1989年间在单一机构接受骨髓移植(BMT)的一系列连续患者,观察其在BMT后180天内非念珠菌真菌感染的发生情况。在1186例患者中,有129例(11%)在此期间共发生了138例严重的非念珠菌真菌感染。8例患者有多种不同感染。最常见的分离菌是曲霉菌属(n = 97),其次是镰刀菌(n = 10)和链格孢属(n = 6)。感染的4种临床亚型为轻度皮肤或软组织感染(n = 7)、单一器官或部位感染(n = 61)、播散性真菌感染(n = 58)和孤立性真菌血症(n = 12)。95%的单一器官或部位感染以及84%的播散性感染累及呼吸道。预后较差,仅有18%的患者存活。66%死亡患者的死因与非念珠菌真菌感染直接相关。单一器官或部位感染患者(41%)和播散性感染患者(83%)的死亡率显著更高。曲霉菌、金孢子菌、镰刀菌、毛霉菌或帚霉属感染后的病因特异性死亡率最高,这些感染有侵袭性疾病和播散性感染的高风险。相比之下,孤立性真菌血症或局限性且适合手术清创的感染的病因特异性死亡率最低,最常见于由枝顶孢属、链格孢属、青霉属和酿酒酵母引起的那些感染。本文回顾了我们系列研究及文献中这些不常见的非念珠菌真菌分离株引起的临床感染谱。这些不寻常的机会性真菌分离株目前在骨髓移植人群等免疫抑制患者中日益受到重视,并对患者预后有重大影响。非念珠菌真菌感染的有效治疗仍然困难。早期积极的手术清创对于控制局限性侵袭性感染似乎很重要。两性霉素B的长期治疗是标准治疗方法,尽管新型抗真菌药物的作用尚未明确界定。粒细胞输注和集落刺激因子也可能起辅助作用。