A ten-year retrospective analysis of nocardiosis in a tertiary care center of South-coastal India

Nocardiosis is an uncommon life-threatening infection caused by spp. This study aimed to review the distribution of risk factors, clinical characteristics, microbiological findings, treatment and outcome of patients diagnosed with nocardiosis. This study was a retrospective case record review of all...

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Veröffentlicht in:Le infezioni in medicina 2021, Vol.29 (4), p.600-608
Hauptverfasser: Kudru, Chandrashekar Udyavara, Kumar, Abishek, Chawla, Kiran, Minnamreddigari, Cheshmitha, Siddalingaiah, Nayana, Guddattu, Vasudeva
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nocardiosis is an uncommon life-threatening infection caused by spp. This study aimed to review the distribution of risk factors, clinical characteristics, microbiological findings, treatment and outcome of patients diagnosed with nocardiosis. This study was a retrospective case record review of all nocardiosis cases that were diagnosed at our tertiary care hospital from January 2008 to December 2019. A total of 48 patients with a mean age of 52.2±16.28 years were included. Out of which forty one (85%) were diagnosed as pulmonary nocardiosis and seven (14.6%) as disseminated disease. Chronic lung disease 25 (52.1%), long term steroid use 22 (45.8%) followed by diabetes mellitus 11 (22.9%) were common predisposing factors. The common symptoms were fever (87.5%), cough (79.2%) and breathlessness (52.1%). The most frequent radiologic finding included consolidation in 38 (79.1%), cavitation with thickened wall in 2 (4.1%), reticulonodular shadows in 2 (4.1%), and unilateral pleural effusion in 5 (10.4%). (22.9%) was frequently isolated from cultures. Resistance to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) was observed in 21% cases. Mortality was noted in 6 (12.5%) patients and all were with pulmonary involvement. The percentage of death among those with and without pulmonary tuberculosis was 33.3% and 5% respectively. Patients affected by pulmonary nocardiosis with previous history of pulmonary tuberculosis showed significant association with poor outcome (p-value=0.05). In conclusion, nocardiosis mainly affects patients with structural lung disease or immunocompromised hosts with adverse outcome. Awareness of this infection is crucial for a clinician, and any suspicion should lead to make an early diagnosis and choose an appropriate empirical treatment to improve the outcome in this population.
ISSN:1124-9390
2532-8689
DOI:10.53854/liim-2904-14