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The Evolution of Fungal Infections in the Surgical Patient Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics PROHIBITED • • • • Kaplan-Meier curves Too many n = ___, p values Multivariate analysis finger pointing Overview • • • • • What is it? Where did it come from? Is it bad? (aka will it keep me up at night?) How do I fix it? Anything else? Fungal Infection •What is it? The players • • • • • • Candida Aspergillus Cryptococcus Histoplasma Coccidioides Blastomyces Candida Subtypes • • • • • C. albicans C. tropicalis C. parapsilosis C. kruzei Torulopsis glabrata Candida in general • Two forms: yeast and mycelial (dimorphism) • Yeast- colonizes humans • Asexual reproduction (budding) into blastospores, which elongate and stick together: pseudohyphae • Most dimorphic fungi, the yeast is invasivenot so with Candida: reverse dimorphism Candida albicans • Commensal organism- lives normally in GI, GU tracts and skin • 25% outpatients colonized with C. albicans • 50-80% of hospitalized patients colonized • Eukaryotic cell • Cell membrane sterol: ergosterol synthesized from lanosterol Candida tropicalis • Second most common Candida isolate of inpatients • Not too virulent unless hematopoetic malignancy or uncontrolled diabetes • Associated with embolic skin lesions • Mortality rate 70% + Candida parapsilosis • • • • Third most common isolate Associated with central lines and TPN Also associated with solid tumor and HIV Less virulent than other Candida, better prognosis • Rare/ no evidence of dissemination to fungemia; has been found w/ HIV endocarditis Candida kruzei • Fourth most common (1-3%), although gaining in ICU popularity • Hits neutropenic patients + hematopoetic malignancy • No more virulent than C. albicans • Resistant to fluconazole Torulopsis glabrata • Not a true Candida- only exists in the yeast form (not dimorphic) • Colonizes GI, GU tracts, rarely skin • Less virulent than C. albicans, similar to C. parapsilosis • Solid tumor, uncontrolled diabetics • Renal infection in diabetics • Mortality 50-70%; somewhat azole resistant Fungal Infection • Where did it come from? Where did it come from? • The patient Where did it come from? • The patient • Thirty years ago, yeast was a contaminant or a nuisance • Increasing ICU stays, increasing risk factors Risk factors for fungal infection • APACHE score >10 • Ventilator for >48 hr • broad spectrum antibiotics • Indwelling catheters • Malnutrition • Prolonged hypotension • Immunosuppression: chemotherapy, transplants • HIV • Cancer survivors • Diabetics • Burns • TPN Broad spectrum antibiotics • Increasing frequency over past two decades • Indigenous intestinal bacterial flora suppress Candida growth, and adherence • Antibiotics with anaerobic activity or high intestinal concentrations cause a higher and more sustained increase in Candida colonization as detected by stool culture • Stone, 1974- Candida translocation Central venous access • Overgrowth of Candida in the GI and GU tracts correspond to increased skin colonization rates • The skin is the source for fungus, while the catheter is the wick • C. parapsilosis has been found in the plastic of central lines and IV tubingmanufacturing contamination Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) • Additive risk to the central line • TPN reduces compliment fixation, depresses macrophage function, and inactivates immunoglobulins • Atrophy of gut mucosa- ?low glutamine? • TPN increases risk of and rates of fungal intestinal translocation • TPN may be contaminated, esp. w/ C. parapsilosis and C. tropicalis Immunosuppression • • • • • • Surgery Trauma Burns Malignancy Bacterial sepsis hypoperfusion • • • • Corticosteroids Chemotherapy Diabetes Post-transplant medications • Congenital (SCID, etc.) Antifungal Immunology • Cellular immunity>>humoral immunity • T-cells: superficial immunity, prevention of colonization • PMN/ Macrophage: phagocytosis • Complement, circulating immunoglobulins and arachadonic acid derivatives play a minor role against fungi Burns • Loss of skin (mechanical barrier) • Gut atrophy correlates with percent burn • Ileus- no enteral feeds • Depression of CD3 and CD4 cell count • Indwelling catheters • TPN • Decreased PMN phagocytosisburnspecific polypeptide • Use of antibiotics • Decreased IL2 production Is it bad?/ Will it keep me up? • Yes, fungemia is bad for the patient • Mortality rates: 70% (Bone marrow failure, Richardson 1998) 32% (Liver transplant, Rabkin 2000) 20% (Candidemia, Rex, 1994) 57% (Postop surgery, Eubanks, 1993) 70% (ICU, Watts, 1999) Morbidity of Fungal infection • • • • • • Candiduria Abdominal abscess Endocarditis Endophthalmitis Myocarditis Skin lesions • • • • • Esophagitis Pharyngitis Pneumonia Peritonitis Suppurative thrombophlebitis • Meningitis SICU length of stay Total No broad Spec Abx Br.Sp.Abx “High risk” Patients 117 40% ICULOS 7 3 HospLOS 22 17 60% 17% 10 20 26 39 Fungal Infection •How do I fix it? How do I fix it? • Diagnose (find it) • Treat (kill it) • Prevention (keep it away) Diagnosis • Not so easy to do • Colonization vs. infection/disseminated disease • Can’t find Candida if you don’t look Lab tests • Yeast + pseudohyphae on histology: definitive for infection • Easy to get if tissue is resected or excised • Most diagnoses of infection rely on inferential evidence Lab tests • Culture results (peritoneal, urine, drain fluid, eschar, ulcer bed) positiveColonization? Infection?- must place test result in context of patient setting • Blood cx notoriously unreliable- Candida is difficult to grow, concomitant bacterial infection decreases Candida yield • 50% of patients with invasive Candidiasis have positive blood cultures Improving Lab Results • Arterial blood culture (Bayard, 1989) • Serology: mannan, beta-1-3-glucan (cell wall) D-arabinitol (metabolite) enolase (cell cytoplasm) • Candida antigen titers Physical exam • Patient doesn’t look good • Endophthalmitis- 30% • Skin lesions associated with progressive myalgias Treatment • Remove infected central lines and prosthetic devices • Drainage/ debridement • Pharmacotherapy: Polyenes Antimetabolites Azoles Polyenes • Nystatin Topical only Cutaneous infection, thrush, infected burns No enteral absorption Reduced Candida overgrowth in GI tract- does it help? • Amphotericin B Structurally similar to membrane sterols: Binds to ergosterol>cholesterol Creates lethal pores- K enters, glucose leaks Resistance: decreased ergosterol content or structural modification of ergosterol Amphotericin B • Effective against Candida and Torulopsis • Route: IV, intrathecal, intravesical • Different products: Liposomal (AmBiosome) Colloidal dispersion (Amphotec) Lipid complex (Abelcet) Amphotericin B • • • • • Toxicity: Hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, renal failure Fever, rigors Mild anemia, thrombocytopenia Full drug course: 12-14 days Antimetabolite • 5-Fluorocytosine Fluoronated cytosine- enters celldeaminated to 5FU- phosphorolation- into RNA • Inhibits protein and DNA synthesis • Synergistic w/ AmphoB; easy resistance • Toxic: anemia/aplasia; lousy wound healing Azoles • Imidazoles (2N) Ketoconazole Miconazole • Triazoles (3N) Itraconazole Fluconazole Mechanism of Action: Block ergosterol synthesis: inhibit C14-alpha demethylase interaction with cytochrome P450, which stops the conversion of lanosterol to ergosterol Problems with Azoles • Ketoconazole: only po; needs acid in stomach to be absorbed; slows adrenal and gonadal steroid production; lipophilic- not dialyzable, poor urine excretion • Miconazole: IV only, horrendous toxicity • Itraconazole: only po; needs acid in stomach to be absorbed; very lipophilicthree day loading dose, lousy urine excretion Fluconazole • PO, IV; oral absorption not affected by gastric pH or food • Water soluble- minimal plasma protein binding- tissue concentrations exceed 50% of the plasma level • Excellent penetration into CSF and urine • Minimally metabolized: 80% excreted unchanged in urine Fluconazole • Must adjust dosing if GFR is < 50ml/ min • Removed during hemodialysis • Effective against: Cryptococcus Coccidioides Histoplasma Blastomyces Candida albicans, tropicalis, parapsilosis • Ineffective against Aspergillus, C. kruzei • T glabrata: Dose dependent kill Prevention • • • • • Remove unnecessary lines/ catheters Enteral feeds over TPN Control blood glucose Restore normotensive state; early extubation Use least possible dose of effective immunosuppressants • Pharmaceutical prophylaxis? Pharmaceutical prophylaxis • Slotman, 1994- patient w/ candiduria equal risk of death as fungemia • Nassoura, 1993- candiduria: AmphoB bladder irrigation- 63% dissemination, 33% mortality Fluconazole IV- 0% dissemination, 5% mortality Recommendations • 1997-consensus statement- ID • For Candidemia and/ or dissemination: 1. Patient stable, no hx of Diflucan, C kruzei unlikely--- Fluconazole 800mg, the 400mg qd 2. Patient stable, + Diflucan for 2d or more--Amphotericin B 0.7mg/ kg 3. Patient unstable, no hx Diflucan, C kruzei unlikely---Fluconazole or AmphoB Recommendations • 1997-consensus statement- ID • Empiric treatment: Fluconazole for non-neutropenic + risk factors Central line TPN >14d antibiotics Complex intraabd surgery Candida isolated from 2 or more sites Fluconazole for neutropenic if fever > 3d w/ appropriate Abx and no identifiable source Recommendations • 1997-consensus statement- ID If Then Candiduria, no DM or No treatment immunosuppression Candida cystitis (pyuria) Diflucan Candida peritonitis Diflucan Candida in liver or spleen Diflucan Endophthalmitis-stable Diflucan Endophthalmitis- worsening AmphoB “Newer” Options… • Voriconazole- azole like fluconazole, similar spectrum of activity but gets Aspergillus (Fall 2001) • Antibiotics vs bacteria- drop of a hat • Antifungals vs Candida, etc.- use responsibly but think about it Questions…?