High Prevalence of Cryptococcal Infection Among HIV-Infected Patients Hospitalized With Pneumonia in Thailand

Cryptococcal antigenemia was common among human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients hospitalized with acute respiratory illness in Thailand. Few clinical differences were evident between antigenemic and nonantigenemic HIV-infected patients. Cryptococcal infection was a possible etiologic agent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical infectious diseases 2012-03, Vol.54 (5), p.e43-e50
Hauptverfasser: Harris, Julie R., Lindsley, Mark D., Henchaichon, Sununta, Poonwan, Natteewan, Naorat, Sathapana, Prapasiri, Prabda, Chantra, Somrak, Ruamcharoen, Fuangrak, Chang, Loretta S., Chittaganpitch, Malinee, Mehta, Nanthawan, Peruski, Leonard, Maloney, Susan A., Park, Benjamin J., Baggett, Henry C.
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Zusammenfassung:Cryptococcal antigenemia was common among human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients hospitalized with acute respiratory illness in Thailand. Few clinical differences were evident between antigenemic and nonantigenemic HIV-infected patients. Cryptococcal infection was a possible etiologic agent of pulmonary disease in many antigenemic patients. Background.  Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is a major cause of death among HIV-infected patients. Cryptococcal antigenemia (CrAg+) in the absence of CM can represent early-stage cryptococcosis during which antifungal treatment might improve outcomes. However, patients without meningitis are rarely tested for cryptococcal infection. We evaluated Cryptococcus species as a cause of acute respiratory infection in hospitalized patients in Thailand and evaluated clinical characteristics associated with CrAg+. Methods.  We tested banked serum samples from 704 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected and 730 HIV-uninfected patients hospitalized with acute respiratory infection from 2004 through 2009 in 2 rural provinces in Thailand for the presence of CrAg+. Retrospective chart reviews were conducted for CrAg+ patients to distinguish meningeal and nonmeningeal cryptococcosis and to identify clinical characteristics associated with CrAg+ in patients with and without evidence of CM. Results.  CrAg+ was found in 92 HIV-infected patients (13.1%); only tuberculosis (19.3%) and rhinovirus (16.5%) were identified more frequently. No HIV-uninfected patients were CrAg+. Of 70 CrAg+ patients with medical charts available, 37 (52.9%) had no evidence of past or existing CM at hospitalization; 30 of those patients (42.9% of all CrAg+) had neither past nor existing CM, nor any alternate etiology of infection identified. Dyspnea was more frequent among CrAg+ patients without CM than among CrAg- patients (P = .0002). Conclusions.  Cryptococcus species were the most common pathogens detected in HIV-infected patients hospitalized with acute respiratory infection in Thailand. Few clinical differences were found between antigenemic and nonantigenemic HIV-infected patients. Health care providers in Thailand should evaluate HIV-infected patients hospitalized with acute respiratory infection for cryptococcal antigenemia, even in the absence of meningitis.
ISSN:1058-4838
1537-6591
DOI:10.1093/cid/cir903