Candida Lusitaniae Catheter-Related Sepsis

Author:

Pietrucha-Dilanchian Paula1,Lewis Russell E2,Ahmad Hussain3,Lechin Alex E4

Affiliation:

1. Paula Pietrucha-Dilanchian PharmD, at time of writing, Clinical Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy, University of Houston, Clinical Pharmacist, Memorial Hermann Southeast Hospital, Houston, TX; now, Clinical Pharmacist, Memorial Hermann Southeast Hospital; Consultant Pharmacist, Integrated Health Concepts, Houston

2. Russell E Lewis PharmD BCPS, Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy, University of Houston

3. Hussain Ahmad MD, Infectious Diseases Consultant, Soofi Institute of Infectious Diseases and Travel Medicine, Houston

4. Alex E Lechin MD FCCP, Clinical Assistant Professor, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston; Clinical Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy, University of Houston; Director, Texas Institute of Chest and Sleep Disorders, Houston; Pulmonary and Critical Care Specialist, Houston

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To present a case describing Candida lusitaniae candidemia in an immunocompetent patient successfully treated with fluconazole antifungal therapy. Time—kill studies of the C. lusitaniae isolate using amphotericin B, and an extensive review of the literature are also presented. CASE SUMMARY: A 52-year-old immunocompetent Latin-American woman was admitted to the special care unit with severe sepsis. Her recent medical history included an exploratory laparotomy for gallstone pancreatitis, requiring cholecystectomy, segmental sigmoid colectomy, drainage of peritoneal abscesses, and a colostomy. In addition, the patient required a central venous catheter (CVC) placement for prolonged broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy and total parenteral nutrition therapy. Yeast was isolated from the abdominal abscess and blood cultures obtained on day 1, and from the catheter tip on day 5. The woman received initial empiric antifungal therapy with fluconazole, which was later changed to amphotericin B. After the yeast was identified as C. lusitaniae on day 8, this was changed to fluconazole for the duration of therapy. C. lusitaniae was not present in blood cultures taken two weeks after the CVC was removed, and the cultures remained negative thereafter. After a prolonged hospitalization, the patient was discharged home. DISCUSSION: Disseminated infections with C. lusitaniae usually occur in immunocompromised patients, although isolated reports of C. lusitaniae infections in immunocompetent patients have been described. Therapeutic challenges of C. lusitaniae treatment include its primary resistance to amphotericin B and species misidentification. Isolates recovered from our patient were submitted for fungus time—kill studies that suggested unique susceptibility patterns to amphotericin B, indicating a trend toward resistance. CONCLUSIONS: Based on variable susceptibility patterns of C. lusitaniae to amphotercin B and flucytosine, fluconazole is an appropriate choice as first-line therapy for C. lusitaniae candidemia.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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