Microbial and clinical epidemiology of invasive fungal rhinosinusitis in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, the divergent causative agents

Author:

Erami Mahzad12,Aboutalebian Shima34ORCID,Hezaveh Seyed Jamal Hashemi1,Ghazvini Roshanak Daie1,Momen-Heravi Mansooreh2,Jafari Yazdan5,Ahsaniarani Amir Hossein6,Basirpour Bahare3,Matini Amir Hassan7,Mirhendi Hossein34

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Parasitology and Mycology, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Tehran , Iran

2. Department of Infectious Disease, School of Medicine, infectious diseases research center, Kashan University of Medical Sciences , Kashan , Iran

3. Department of Medical Parasitology and Mycology, School of Medicine, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Isfahan , Iran

4. Mycology Reference Laboratory, Research Core Facilities Laboratory, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences , Isfahan , Iran

5. Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Kashan University of Medical Sciences , Kashan , Iran

6. Department of Otorhinolaryngology, School of Medicine, Matini Hospital, Kashan University of Medical Sciences , Kashan , Iran

7. Department of Pathology and Histology, School of Medicine, Shahid Beheshti Hospital, Kashan University of Medical Sciences , Kashan , Iran

Abstract

AbstractSince COVID-19 spread worldwide, invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (IFRS) has emerged in immunocompromised patients as a new clinical challenge. In this study, clinical specimens of 89 COVID-19 patients who presented clinical and radiological evidence suggestive of IFRS were examined by direct microscopy, histopathology, and culture, and the isolated colonies were identified through DNA sequence analysis. Fungal elements were microscopically observed in 84.27% of the patients. Males (53.9%) and patients over 40 (95.5%) were more commonly affected than others. Headache (94.4%) and retro-orbital pain (87.6%) were the most common symptoms, followed by ptosis/proptosis/eyelid swelling (52.8%), and 74 patients underwent surgery and debridement. The most common predisposing factors were steroid therapy (n = 83, 93.3%), diabetes mellitus (n = 63, 70.8%), and hypertension (n = 42, 47.2%). The culture was positive for 60.67% of the confirmed cases, and Mucorales were the most prevalent (48.14%) causative fungal agents. Different species of Aspergillus (29.63%) and Fusarium (3.7%) and a mix of two filamentous fungi (16.67%) were other causative agents. For 21 patients, no growth was seen in culture despite a positive result on microscopic examinations. In PCR-sequencing of 53 isolates, divergent fungal taxons, including 8 genera and 17 species, were identified as followed: Rhizopus oryzae (n = 22), Aspergillus flavus (n = 10), A. fumigatus (n = 4), A. niger (n = 3), R. microsporus (n = 2), Mucor circinelloides, Lichtheimia ramosa, Apophysomyces variabilis, A. tubingensis, A. alliaceus, A. nidulans, A. calidoustus, Fusarium fujikuroi/proliferatum, F. oxysporum, F. solani, Lomentospora prolificans, and Candida albicans (each n = 1). In conclusion, a diverse set of species involved in COVID-19-associated IFRS was observed in this study. Our data encourage specialist physicians to consider the possibility of involving various species in IFRS in immunocompromised and COVID-19 patients. In light of utilizing molecular identification approaches, the current knowledge of microbial epidemiology of invasive fungal infections, especially IFRS, may change dramatically.

Funder

Isfahan University of Medical Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,General Medicine

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