“…Most probably, the long period of increased immunosuppression caused by the continuum COVID-19 infection-cellular rejection and their corresponding immunosuppressive treatments were capital for the development of the mucor infection, particularly considering that our patient also presented other risk factors such as poorly controlled DM with glycosilated hemoglobing >7% and chronic lymphedema. Interestingly, while other cases of cutaneous mucormycosis have been previously reported in LT recipients [5] , [6] , [7] , [8] , most of them occurred in the early post-transplant period, when immunosuppression is highest, and the site of infection was predominantly the surgical wound. In contrast, our case was diagnosed in the setting of long-term increased immunosuppression due to COVID-19 requiring steroids, followed by rejection after steroid tapering that required steroid pulses.…”