Vascular Catheter-Associated Fungemia in Patients with Cancer: Analysis of 155 Episodes

We reviewed all 155 episodes of central venous catheter-associated fungemia among inpatients at the National Cancer Institute during a 10-year period. Candida species accounted for 98% of episodes. Fungemia was documented by culture of blood drawn through catheters in 50% of cases and by culture of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical infectious diseases 1992-04, Vol.14 (4), p.875-883
Hauptverfasser: Lecciones, Julius A., Lee, James W., Navarro, Eileen E., Witebsky, Frank G., Marshall, Dorie, Steinberg, Seth M., Pizzo, Philip A., Walsh, Thomas J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We reviewed all 155 episodes of central venous catheter-associated fungemia among inpatients at the National Cancer Institute during a 10-year period. Candida species accounted for 98% of episodes. Fungemia was documented by culture of blood drawn through catheters in 50% of cases and by culture of both catheter-drawn and peripheral blood in 39%; mortality and the rate of dissemination were similar for these two groups. Four management strategies were used: catheter removal, antifungal therapy (with amphotericin B), both, or neither; indications for the use of both modes of treatment included fever, neutropenia, long-term indwelling catheterization, positive cultures of both catheter-drawn and peripheral blood, isolation of Candida tropicalis, and fungal isolation from two or more blood cultures. Disseminated fungal infection was documented in 82% of cases with these features but also in 35% of the less severe cases treated only with catheter removal. In addition, nine (82%) of 11 cases managed only with antifungal therapy had a negative outcome (either death from disseminated infection or the recurrence of fevers and/or fungemia), a finding suggesting that intravascular catheters should be removed in fungemia. Virtually all cases of catheter-associated fungemia in patients with cancer are clinically significant and require prompt therapy with amphotericin B.
ISSN:1058-4838
1537-6591
DOI:10.1093/clinids/14.4.875