The Case of a Janitorial Supervisor With Occupational Asthma Complicated by the Mixed Colonization of the Respiratory Tract by Candida albicans and Alternaria spp

Cureus. 2021 Apr 26;13(4):e14702. doi: 10.7759/cureus.14702.

Abstract

Patients on immunosuppressant agents, including oral corticosteroids, are susceptible to fungal colonization despite being otherwise immunologically intact. This case report highlights a state-of-the-art biological modifier therapy for the complex care of a patient with refractory occupational asthma, allergic rhinitis, and mixed fungal colonization. A dyspneic 38-year-old male janitor with steroid-dependent occupational asthma refractory to omalizumab therapy was colonized with Candida and Alternaria following a promotion to a managerial position in a moldy office. He was treated with itraconazole and systemic steroids. Pulmonary workup revealed moderate obstructive ventilatory defect, peripheral airway hyperresponsiveness, and eosinophilic airway inflammation. Three additional biological modifiers (reslizumab, benralizumab, and dupilumab) were administered to this patient. His asthma was ultimately controlled with reslizumab and dupilumab. Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) normalized after dupilumab monotherapy, enabling the patient to taper off chronic prednisone therapy. Various occupational exposures are crucial epidemiologic factors related to infection and go hand-in-glove with long-term prednisone treatment towards increasing susceptibility to fungal colonization. Steroid-sparing anti-interleukin-5 (IL-5) agents and dupilumab should be considered as alternative treatment options for patients, such as ours, with eosinophilic, prednisone-dependent asthma refractory to omalizumab therapy.

Keywords: biological modifier therapy; dupilumab; mixed fungal colonization; occupational asthma; reslizumab.

Publication types

  • Case Reports