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Epidemiology, Management, and Outcome of Invasive Fungal Disease in Patients Undergoing Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation in China: A Multicenter Prospective Observational Study

Authors :
Shen Zx
He Huang
Xiao-Jun Huang
Fanyi Meng
Li Yu
Depei Wu
Yu Ji
Chun Wang
Yu-Qian Sun
Hanyun Ren
Mingzhe Han
Xi Zhang
Source :
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation. 21:1117-1126
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

The China Assessment of Antifungal Therapy in Hematological Disease study, the first large-scale observational study of invasive fungal disease (IFD) in China, enrolled 1401 patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) (75.2% allogeneic and 24.8% autologous) at 31 hospitals across China. The overall incidence of proven or probable IFD was 7.7% (108 of 1401); another 266 cases (19.0%) were possible IFD. After allogeneic or autologous HSCT, the incidence of proven/probable IFD was 8.9% (94 of 1053) and 4.0% (14 of 348), respectively. Some cases (14 of 108) developed during conditioning before transplantation. The cumulative incidence of proven/probable IFD increased steeply in the first month after transplantation and after 6 months, the incidence was significantly higher in allogeneic than it was in autologous transplant recipients (9.2% versus 3.5%; P = .001) and when stem cells were derived from cord blood or bone marrow and peripheral blood (P = .02 versus other sources). Independent risk factors for proven/probable IFD in allogeneic HSCT were diabetes, HLA-matched unrelated donor, prolonged severe neutropenia (absolute neutrophil count > 500/mm3 for >14 days), and immunosuppressants (odds ratio, 2.0 to 3.4 for all). Antifungal prophylaxis was independently protective (P = .01). Previous IFD and prolonged severe neutropenia were significant independent risk factors among autologous transplantation patients (P < .01, P = .04, respectively). In total, 1175 (83.9%) patients received antifungal prophylaxis (91.6% triazoles) and 514 (36.7%) were treated in the hospital with therapeutic antifungals (89.1% triazoles; median 27 days). Empirical, pre-emptive, and targeted antifungals were used in 82.3%, 13.6%, and 4.1% of cases, respectively. Overall mortality (13.4%; 188 deaths) was markedly higher in patients with proven (5 of 16; 31.3%), probable (20 of 92; 21.7%), or possible (61 of 266; 22.9%) IFD; allogeneic (171 of 1053; 16.2%) rather than autologous (17 of 348; 4.9%) HSCT and was significantly higher in patients receiving pre-emptive (18.6%) rather than empirical (6.1%) or targeted (9.5%) antifungal therapy (P = .002). Improvements in the selection and timing of prophylactic antifungals would be welcome. Health care providers should remain alert to the increased risk of IFD and associated mortality in allogeneic HSCT recipients and the ongoing risk of IFD even after discharge from the hospital.

Details

ISSN :
10838791
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f718cd21e25cc982428b1c98e116084
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbmt.2015.03.018