Invasive aspergillosis and endocarditis

Titre traduit de la contribution: Aspergillose invasive et endocardite

K. Chevalier, F. Barde, S. Benhamida, M. Le Meur, M. Thyrault, Y. Bentoumi, N. Lau, J. Lebut

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

8 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Introduction: Aspergillus fumigatus can cause a systemic infection called invasive aspergillosis causing pulmonary and extra-pulmonary damage. Aspergillus endocarditis (AE) is a relatively rare disease but can be life-threatening. Case reports: We report here on five cases of endocarditis due to invasive aspergillosis: a 58-year-old man receiving immunosuppressive medication following a kidney graft, a 58-year-old man undergoing chemotherapy for chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, a 55-year-old man receiving corticosteroids for IgA vasculitis, a 52-year-old HIV-infected woman under no specific treatment and a 17-year-old boy under immunosuppressive therapy for auto-immune chronic neutropenia. Discussion: Aspergillus accounts for 25–30% of fungal endocarditis and 0.25% to 8.5% of all cases of infectious endocarditis. Aspergillus endocarditis results from invasion of the lung arterioles by hyphae and blood dissemination. It is associated with a very high mortality rate (42–68%). Diagnosing Aspergillus endocarditis is mainly problematic because blood cultures are almost always negative, and fever may be absent. Immunosuppression, haematological malignancies, recent cardiothoracic surgery, negative blood cultures with endocarditis and/or systemic or pulmonary emboli are predictors of AE. In the setting of endocarditis, some clinical characteristics may raise early suspicions of aspergillosis rather than a non-fungal agent: no fever, vegetations affecting the mitral valve, non-valve or aortotomy sites, aortic abscess or pseudo-aneurysm. The identification of invasive aspergillosis is based on a chest CT scan, microscopy/culture or other serological and molecular tests. The treatment of Aspergillus endocarditis requires triazole antifungal drugs, and frequently additional surgical debridement. Conclusion: Aspergillus endocarditis is rare but is associated with a very high mortality rate. Knowledge of its predictive factors and key clinical features can help to differentiate aspergillosis from non-fungal endocarditis and may enable improved survival rates.

Titre traduit de la contributionAspergillose invasive et endocardite
langue originaleAnglais
Pages (de - à)678-685
Nombre de pages8
journalRevue de Medecine Interne
Volume42
Numéro de publication10
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 1 oct. 2021
Modification externeOui

Contient cette citation