A 41-year-old woman with no known immunosuppression experienced a 12-year period of a relapsing phaeohyphomycosis. Despite administration of multiple courses of therapy with standard antifungals, sustained clinical remission was not achieved. A partial response was seen initially with the combination of itraconazole and flucytosine therapy, but the patient did not respond to subsequent treatment. During the patient's pregnancy, the mycosis became disseminated, with lymphadenopathy and fever, and was considered life threatening. Despite receipt of parenteral amphotericin B therapy, the patient did not show a clinical response. After premature delivery by cesarean section, treatment with oral posaconazole suspension (800 mg/day) was started. The patient's condition improved within 1 week after initiating treatment; therapy was continued for 13 months. During posaconazole treatment, the patient showed a complete clinical response, with negative results of fungal cultures.
Aspergillosis is a set of very frequent and widely distributed opportunistic diseases. Azoles are the first choice for most clinical forms. However, the distribution of azole-resistant strains is not well known around the world, especially in developing countries. The aim of our study was to determine the proportion of non-wild type strains among the clinical isolates of Aspergillus spp. To this end, the minimum inhibitory concentration of three azoles and amphotericin B (used occasionally in severe forms) was studied by broth microdilution. Unexpectedly, it was found that 8.1% of the isolates studied have a diminished susceptibility to itraconazole. This value turned out to be similar to the highest azole resistance rate reported in different countries across the world.
The results of this study confirm an association between HICP and mortality in patients with CMRA and indicate that the control of ICP during the first 5 days of hospitalization is more important than managing HICP only at baseline.
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