Pacemaker-related Candida parapsilosis fungaemia in an immunosuppressed renal transplant recipient

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Abstract

Renal transplant recipients are at risk for opportunistic infections due to their immunosuppressed state. We describe the case of a 59-year-old renal transplant recipient who presented with sepsis and bilateral pulmonary emboli due to Candida parapsilosis. She was treated with intravenous caspofungin and had a transoesophageal echocardiogram, which revealed vegetations on her pacemaker leads. She then underwent surgery to replace her pacemaker; however, her blood cultures remained positive for C. parapsilosis postoperatively. Her antifungal was switched to liposomal amphotericin B and flucytosine for 6 weeks, which yielded sterile blood cultures, and she was then initiated on lifelong fluconazole. Her recovery was complicated by tacrolimus toxicity 1 month after discharge due to fluconazole-induced CYP3A inhibition.

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Hebert, J., Barr, E., & Magee, C. (2021). Pacemaker-related Candida parapsilosis fungaemia in an immunosuppressed renal transplant recipient. BMJ Case Reports, 14(7). https://doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2021-242917

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