Aspergillosis coinfection in patients with proven mucormycosis

Author:

Ra Sang Hyun1,Kim Ji Yeun1,Song Joon Seon2,Jang Hyeon Mu1,Chang Euijin1,Bae Seongman1,Jung Jiwon1,Kim Min Jae1,Chong Yong Pil1ORCID,Lee Sang-Oh1,Choi Sang-Ho1ORCID,Kim Yang Soo1,Kim Sung-Han1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infectious Diseases, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine , Seoul , Republic of Korea

2. Department of Pathology, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine , Seoul , Republic of Korea

Abstract

Abstract Although research on aspergillosis and mucormycosis confection is important to optimize antifungal therapy, data on this issue is scarce. Thus, we systematically investigated aspergillosis coinfection in patients with proven mucormycosis. Medical records of adult patients with proven mucormycosis whose formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue sections were available, in a tertiary hospital from August 2007 to July 2023 were retrospectively reviewed to assess coinfection with aspergillosis. We noted cultures of fungi from sterile and non-sterile sites and performed PCR assays on FFPE tissues to detect Aspergillus- and Mucorales-specific DNA. Sixty-seven patients with proven mucormycosis, including 12 (18%) with positive culture of the mucormycosis agent from sterile site cultures, were enrolled. Fungal cultures from sterile and non-sterile sites revealed Aspergillus spp. growth in 9 (13%) of the 67 patients, including 2 sterile and 7 non-sterile cultures. The fungal PCR analysis from the FFPE sections was positive for Aspergillus-specific PCR in 5 (7%) and positive for both Aspergillus- and Mucorales-specific PCR results in 8 (12%). Overall, 21 (31%) of the 67 patients with proven mucormycosis had microbiologic and/or molecular evidence of aspergillosis coinfection. Positive blood or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid galactomannan results were more common in the coinfection group (67% [14/21]) than in the mucormycosis group (37% [17/46], P = 0.024). No significant difference in mortality between the two groups was observed. Approximately one-third of patients with proven mucormycosis exhibited molecular and/or microbiologic evidence of aspergillosis coinfection. Further research is needed to identify patients with aspergillosis and mucormycosis coinfections, for optimal antifungal therapy.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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