Browsing by Author "Salmanton-García, Jon"
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Item Open Access Global guideline for the diagnosis and management of rare mould infections: an initiative of the European Confederation of Medical Mycology in cooperation with the International Society for Human and Animal Mycology and the American Society for Microbiology.(The Lancet. Infectious diseases, 2021-08) Hoenigl, Martin; Salmanton-García, Jon; Walsh, Thomas J; Nucci, Marcio; Neoh, Chin Fen; Jenks, Jeffrey D; Lackner, Michaela; Sprute, Rosanne; Al-Hatmi, Abdullah MS; Bassetti, Matteo; Carlesse, Fabianne; Freiberger, Tomas; Koehler, Philipp; Lehrnbecher, Thomas; Kumar, Anil; Prattes, Juergen; Richardson, Malcolm; Revankar, Sanjay; Slavin, Monica A; Stemler, Jannik; Spiess, Birgit; Taj-Aldeen, Saad J; Warris, Adilia; Woo, Patrick CY; Young, Jo-Anne H; Albus, Kerstin; Arenz, Dorothee; Arsic-Arsenijevic, Valentina; Bouchara, Jean-Philippe; Chinniah, Terrence Rohan; Chowdhary, Anuradha; de Hoog, G Sybren; Dimopoulos, George; Duarte, Rafael F; Hamal, Petr; Meis, Jacques F; Mfinanga, Sayoki; Queiroz-Telles, Flavio; Patterson, Thomas F; Rahav, Galia; Rogers, Thomas R; Rotstein, Coleman; Wahyuningsih, Retno; Seidel, Danila; Cornely, Oliver AWith increasing numbers of patients needing intensive care or who are immunosuppressed, infections caused by moulds other than Aspergillus spp or Mucorales are increasing. Although antifungal prophylaxis has shown effectiveness in preventing many invasive fungal infections, selective pressure has caused an increase of breakthrough infections caused by Fusarium, Lomentospora, and Scedosporium species, as well as by dematiaceous moulds, Rasamsonia, Schizophyllum, Scopulariopsis, Paecilomyces, Penicillium, Talaromyces and Purpureocillium species. Guidance on the complex multidisciplinary management of infections caused by these pathogens has the potential to improve prognosis. Management routes depend on the availability of diagnostic and therapeutic options. The present recommendations are part of the One World-One Guideline initiative to incorporate regional differences in the epidemiology and management of rare mould infections. Experts from 24 countries contributed their knowledge and analysed published evidence on the diagnosis and treatment of rare mould infections. This consensus document intends to provide practical guidance in clinical decision making by engaging physicians and scientists involved in various aspects of clinical management. Moreover, we identify areas of uncertainty and constraints in optimising this management.Item Open Access Needles in a haystack: Extremely rare invasive fungal infections reported in FungiScopeⓇ-Global Registry for Emerging Fungal Infections.(The Journal of infection, 2020-11) Salmanton-García, Jon; Koehler, Philipp; Kindo, Anupma; Falces-Romero, Iker; García-Rodríguez, Julio; Ráčil, Zdeněk; Chen, Sharon C-A; Klimko, Nikolai; Desoubeaux, Guillaume; Thompson, George R; Benítez-Peñuela, Miguel-Ángel; Rodríguez, José-Yesid; Sheppard, Donald C; Hoenigl, Martin; Le Govic, Yohann; Badali, Hamid; Baddley, John W; Chander, Jagdish; Ingram, Paul R; Pakstis, Diana L; Mellinghoff, Sibylle C; Atıcı, Serkan; Cesaro, Simone; Chakrabarti, Arunaloke; Dupont, Damien; González, Gloria M; Hatvani, Lóránt; Herbrecht, Raoul; Klyasova, Galina; Lass-Flörl, Cornelia; Mareș, Mihai; Mullane, Kathleen; Vinh, Donald C; Wisplinghoff, Hilmar; Lackner, Michaela; Cornely, Oliver A; Seidel, Danila; ECMM/ISHAM working groupObjectives
Emerging invasive fungal infections (IFI) have become a notable challenge. Apart from the more frequently described fusariosis, lomentosporiosis, mucormycosis, scedosporiosis, and certain dematiaceae or yeasts, little is known about extremely rare IFI.Methods
Extremely rare IFI collected in the FungiScopeⓇ registry were grouped as Dematiaceae, Hypocreales, Saccharomycetales, Eurotiales, Dermatomycetes, Agaricales, and Mucorales.Results
Between 2003 and June 2019, 186 extremely rare IFI were documented in FungiScopeⓇ. Dematiaceae (35.5%), Hypocreales (23.1%), Mucorales (11.8%), and Saccharomycetales (11.3%) caused most IFI. Most patients had an underlying malignancy (38.7%) with acute leukemia accounting for 50% of cancers. Dissemination was observed in 26.9% of the patients. Complete or partial clinical response rate was 68.3%, being highest in Eurotiales (82.4%) and in Agaricales (80.0%). Overall mortality rate was 29.3%, ranging from 11.8% in Eurotiales to 50.0% in Mucorales.Conclusions
Physicians are confronted with a complex variety of fungal pathogens, for which treatment recommendations are lacking and successful outcome might be incidental. Through an international consortium of physicians and scientists, these cases of extremely rare IFI can be collected to further investigate their epidemiology and eventually identify effective treatment regimens.Item Open Access Risk factors and outcome of pulmonary aspergillosis in critically ill coronavirus disease 2019 patients-a multinational observational study by the European Confederation of Medical Mycology.(Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, 2022-04) Prattes, Juergen; Wauters, Joost; Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto; Salmanton-García, Jon; Maertens, Johan; Bourgeois, Marc; Reynders, Marijke; Rutsaert, Lynn; Van Regenmortel, Niels; Lormans, Piet; Feys, Simon; Reisinger, Alexander Christian; Cornely, Oliver A; Lahmer, Tobias; Valerio, Maricela; Delhaes, Laurence; Jabeen, Kauser; Steinmann, Joerg; Chamula, Mathilde; Bassetti, Matteo; Hatzl, Stefan; Rautemaa-Richardson, Riina; Koehler, Philipp; Lagrou, Katrien; Hoenigl, Martin; ECMM-CAPA Study GroupObjectives
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) -associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA) has emerged as a complication in critically ill COVID-19 patients. The objectives of this multinational study were to determine the prevalence of CAPA in patients with COVID-19 in intensive care units (ICU) and to investigate risk factors for CAPA as well as outcome.Methods
The European Confederation of Medical Mycology (ECMM) conducted a multinational study including 20 centres from nine countries to assess epidemiology, risk factors and outcome of CAPA. CAPA was defined according to the 2020 ECMM/ISHAM consensus definitions.Results
A total of 592 patients were included in this study, including 11 (1.9%) patients with histologically proven CAPA, 80 (13.5%) with probable CAPA, 18 (3%) with possible CAPA and 483 (81.6%) without CAPA. CAPA was diagnosed a median of 8 days (range 0-31 days) after ICU admission predominantly in older patients (adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) 1.04 per year; 95% CI 1.02-1.06) with any form of invasive respiratory support (HR 3.4; 95% CI 1.84-6.25) and receiving tocilizumab (HR 2.45; 95% CI 1.41-4.25). Median prevalence of CAPA per centre was 10.7% (range 1.7%-26.8%). CAPA was associated with significantly lower 90-day ICU survival rate (29% in patients with CAPA versus 57% in patients without CAPA; Mantel-Byar p < 0.001) and remained an independent negative prognostic variable after adjusting for other predictors of survival (HR 2.14; 95% CI 1.59-2.87, p ≤ 0.001).Conclusion
Prevalence of CAPA varied between centres. CAPA was significantly more prevalent among older patients, patients receiving invasive ventilation and patients receiving tocilizumab, and was an independent strong predictor of ICU mortality.