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Baseline findings of a multicentric ambispective cohort study (2021–2022) among hospitalised mucormycosis patients in India

Authors :
Rizwan Suliankatchi Abdulkader
Manickam Ponnaiah
Tarun Bhatnagar
Devika S
Amanda G.A Rozario
Gayathri K
Malu Mohan
Michaelraj E
Divya Saravanakumar
Aditya Moorthy
Amit Kumar Tyagi
Bhagirathsinh D Parmar
K Devaraja
Gaurav Medikeri
Jutika Ojah
Kajal Srivastava
Karthikeyan K
Nandini Das
Niharika B
Parul Sharma
Pradipta Kumar Parida
Prasanna Kumar Saravanam
Praveen Kulkarni
Priya S
Pushpa Patil S
Rahul Kumar Bagla
Ramesh D
Renuka S Melkundi
Satish S Satpute
Seetharaman Narayanan
Shubhashri Jahagirdar
Simmi Dube
Sunil Kumar Panigrahi
Surendra Babu D
Vaibhav Saini
Rita Singh Saxena
Abhinav Srivastava
Achyut Chandra Baishya
Ajai Garg
Amit Kumar Mishra
Anjan Jyoti Talukdar
Ankita Kankaria
Arathi Karat
Arul Sundaresh Kumar
Ashi Chug
Ashok Vankundre
Balakrishnan Ramaswamy
Bharathi MB
Bhargav R Jadav
Muthuswamy Dhiwakar
Girija Ghate
Hardik V Shah
Ipsita Saha
Kavya Sivapuram
Krupal J Joshi
Mahendra Singh
Mukesh Chand Bairwa
Divya K
Muthurajesh E
Navneh Samagh
Nethra Dinakaran
Nikhil Gupta
Nitin Gupta
Nitin M Nagarkar
Nitin Solanki
Prasan Kumar Panda
Prithvi Bachalli
Raghunath Shanbag
Rajashri Patil
Rajesh Kumar A
Rakesh Narayan Patil
Ramanikanth Thookkanaickenpalayam Vijayaraghavan
Ramesh Hanumantappa
Rathinavel A
Saleel Kumar Mandal
Sanjay Pandharinath Kishve
Sara Varghese Thomas
Saurav Sarkar
Shalini Thakur
Siddaram Patil
Somu Lakshmanan
Srinivas D Rao
Sumathi V
Tulasi Nayak
Umesh R Dixit
Unnikrishnan B
Varsha Backiavathy
Vijendra Shenoy
Vinay Kumar Hallur
Aparna Bhatnagar
Manoj V Murhekar
Source :
Mycology, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 70-84 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2024.

Abstract

In India, the incidence of mucormycosis reached high levels during 2021–2022, coinciding with the COVID-19 pandemic. In response to this, we established a multicentric ambispective cohort of patients hospitalised with mucormycosis across India. In this paper, we report their baseline profile, clinical characteristics and outcomes at discharge. Patients hospitalized for mucormycosis during March–July 2021 were included. Mucormycosis was diagnosed based on mycological confirmation on direct microscopy (KOH/Calcofluor white stain), culture, histopathology, or supportive evidence from endoscopy or imaging. After consent, trained data collectors used medical records and telephonic interviews to capture data in a pre-tested structured questionnaire. At baseline, we recruited 686 patients from 26 study hospitals, of whom 72.3% were males, 78% had a prior history of diabetes, 53.2% had a history of corticosteroid treatment, and 80% were associated with COVID-19. Pain, numbness or swelling of the face were the commonest symptoms (73.3%). Liposomal Amphotericin B was the commonest drug formulation used (67.1%), and endoscopic sinus surgery was the most common surgical procedure (73.6%). At discharge, the disease was stable in 43.3%, in regression for 29.9% but 9.6% died during hospitalization. Among survivors, commonly reported disabilities included facial disfigurement (18.4%) and difficulties in chewing/swallowing (17.8%). Though the risk of mortality was only 1 in 10, the disability due to the disease was very high. This cohort study could enhance our understanding of the disease’s clinical progression and help frame standard treatment guidelines.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21501203 and 21501211
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Mycology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1ca70c2bc1ac4c3a8329c7c11d74f4b5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/21501203.2023.2271928