Blastoschizomyces capitatus Infection in Patients with Leukemia: Report of 26 Cases

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Abstract

Twenty-six cases of Blastoschizomyces capitatus infection were diagnosed in 25 patients at 7 tertiary care hematology units in Spain over a 10-year period. Most patients (92%) had acute leukemia and developed infection during a period of severe and prolonged neutropenia. Two patients had esophagitis, and the rest had invasive infection. Fungemia (20 cases) was a common finding, with frequent visceral dissemination. The 30-day mortality associated with this infection was 52%, compared with 57% among patients with systemic infection. In a univariate analysis, the following 3 variables had a positive impact on 30-day survival: removal of the central venous catheter within 5 days after the onset of infection (P = .02), a good performance status (P = .003), and receipt of systemic prophylactic or empirical antifungal therapy before infection onset (P = .006). Outcome for neutropenic patients with B. capitatus infection is still poor. Rapid removal of the central venous catheter and novel antifungal therapies are recommended for treatment of this rare infection.

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APA

Martino, R., Salavert, M., Parody, R., Tomás, J. F., De La Cámara, R., Vázquez, L., … Sierra, J. (2004). Blastoschizomyces capitatus Infection in Patients with Leukemia: Report of 26 Cases. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 38(3), 335–341. https://doi.org/10.1086/380643

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