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      Aspergillosis in lung transplantation: incidence, risk factors, and prophylactic strategies

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      Transplant Infectious Disease
      Wiley

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          Invasive aspergillosis.

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            Therapeutic outcome in invasive aspergillosis.

            D Denning (1996)
            A review of series of > or = 4 cases of invasive aspergillosis (total, 1,223 cases) was undertaken to establish the crude mortality and rate of response to therapy with amphotericin B in the major at-risk host groups. In association with pulmonary, sinus, and cerebral aspergillosis in immunocompromised patients, the crude mortality rates were 86%, 66%, and 99%, respectively. No untreated patient survived. Among 84 patients treated for 1-13 days, only one survived. Among those with invasive pulmonary aspergillosis treated for > or = 14 days, the response rates to amphotericin B deoxycholate were 83% (in cases of heart and renal transplantation), 54% (leukemia), 33% (bone marrow transplantation) and 20% (liver transplantation). Patients with AIDS mostly received both amphotericin B and itraconazole, and 37% of those treated for > or = 14 days responded to therapy. Substantial variation in outcome from series to series was related to underlying disease status, site of disease, and management. Invasive aspergillosis remains a devastating opportunistic infection despite current treatment.
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              Epidemiology of Aspergillus infections in a large cohort of patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation.

              To investigate the incidence, risk factors, and outcome of Aspergillus infections among marrow transplant recipients, records from 2496 patients were reviewed, and 214 patients had Aspergillus organisms identified. Of these, 158 had invasive aspergillosis, 44 were colonized, and 12 had contaminated cultures. The incidence of invasive aspergillosis increased from 5.7% to 11.2% during the study. The onset of infection was bimodal, peaking 16 and 96 days after transplant. For patients within 40 days after transplant, underlying disease, donor type, season, and transplant outside of laminar air flow rooms were associated with significant risk for invasive aspergillosis. For patients >40 days after transplant, age, underlying disease, donor type, graft-versus-host disease, neutropenia, and corticosteroid use were associated with increased risk of aspergillosis. Only 31% of infected patients were neutropenic at the time of diagnosis. The risk factors for aspergillosis depend on the time after marrow transplant and include both host and environmental characteristics.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Transplant Infectious Disease
                Transplant Infect Dis
                Wiley
                1398-2273
                1399-3062
                September 2001
                September 2001
                : 3
                : 3
                : 161-167
                Article
                10.1034/j.1399-3062.2001.003003161.x
                11493398
                c2b5f517-29c1-4638-94f9-7b0a42f594e0
                © 2001

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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