Contrasts between mucormycosis and aspergillosis in oncohematological patients

Med Mycol. 2019 Apr 1;57(Supplement_2):S138-S144. doi: 10.1093/mmy/myy116.

Abstract

In retrospective multicenter study from years 2007-2017, we evaluated 59 oncohematological patients with mucormycosis and 541 with invasive aspergillosis (IA). Mucormycosis developed more often in children and adolescents (P = .001), as well as after the emergence of graft versus host disease (P = .0001). Patients with mucormycosis had more severe neutropenia (88% vs 82%), the median duration was 30 versus 14 days (P = .0001) and lymphocytopenia (77% vs 65%), with a median duration (25 vs 14 days, P = .001) as compared to patients with IA. The lung infection was less frequent in patients with mucormycosis than in IA patients (73% vs 97%, P = .02), but more frequent was involvement of 2 or more organs (42% vs 8%, P = .001) and involvement of paranasal sinuses (15% vs 6%, P = .04). Typical clinical features of mucormycosis were localized pain syndrome (53% vs 5%, P = .0001), hemoptysis (32% vs 6%, P = .001), pleural effusion on lung CT scan (53% vs 7%, P = .003), lesions with destruction (38% vs 8%, P = .0001), and a "reverse halo" sign (17% vs 3%). The overall 12-week survival was significantly lower in patients with mucormycosis than for IA patients (49% vs 81%, P = .0001). In both groups unfavorable prognosis factors were ≥2 organs involvement (P = .0009), and concomitant bacterial or viral infection (P = .001, P = .008, respectively). In mucormycosis patients favorable prognosis factor was remission of underlying disease (P = .006).

Keywords: Aspergillus spp; Rhizomucor; Rhizopus; acute leukemia; invasive aspergillosis; mucormycosis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Aspergillosis / mortality
  • Aspergillosis / pathology*
  • Hematologic Neoplasms / complications*
  • Humans
  • Mucormycosis / mortality
  • Mucormycosis / pathology*
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Survival Analysis