Invasive fungal infections
Key points
Invasive fungal infections are often rapidly life threatening and require prompt diagnosis and therapy as well as specialist consultation
First-line agents for the treatment of invasive aspergillosis include voriconazole and liposomal amphotericin B
Therapeutic drug monitoring should be considered as a routine adjunct when using voriconazole and posaconazole
The echinocandins (caspofungin, micafungin and anidulafungin) are first-line agents for the treatment of invasive candidiasis
Patients with invasive candidiasis should have prompt medical therapy and a careful search for metastatic infection
Introduction
Invasive fungal infections continue to extract a significant toll on human health and to be associated with excessive morbidity and mortality. The clinical challenges posed by these organisms are many and protean. Patients who are at risk of invasive fungal infections often have multiple comorbidities. Diagnostic tests are slow, often with low sensitivity and/or specificity and are expensive. Furthermore, there are limited therapeutic options. Many antifungal agents have significant drug-related toxicity, drug–drug interactions and are extremely expensive.
In a tertiary care setting that contains a large number of patients who are immunocompromised, a wide variety of fungal pathogens will be encountered. These will ordinarily require specialist laboratory and clinical skills to aid in the diagnosis and management. The most common medically important fungal pathogens in resource-rich healthcare settings are Aspergillus spp and Candida spp. From a global perspective, Cryptococcus neoformans is a leading cause of infectious morbidity and mortality, with an estimated 600,000 deaths per year.1 Clinicians might encounter a wide range of relatively rare and esoteric pathogens belonging to Mucorales (eg Rhizopus spp), hyalohyphomycetes (eg Fusarium and Scedosporium spp) or phaeohyphomycetes (eg Alternaria spp and Cladophialophora bantiana). These organisms are frequently difficult to treat and require specialist consultation. A variety of endemic fungal diseases might also be encountered (eg histoplasmosis, blastomycosis, coccidioidomycosis and paracoccidioidomycosis), making a detailed travel and occupational history mandatory. In this article, we focus on the most common medically important fungal pathogens in the UK: Aspergillus and Candida spp.
Invasive aspergillosis
Introduction
Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is a leading cause of infectious morbidity and mortality in patients who are profoundly immunocompromised. The most common clinical contexts where IA is seen include profound and prolonged neutropenia, haematopoietic stem-cell transplantation and solid organ transplantation (especially lung transplantation). IA is also increasingly seen in patients who are critically ill on intensive care units2 and might also be seen in a variety of scenarios where there is significant underlying damage to the lung (eg near drowning or post influenza).
Diagnosis
IA is notoriously difficult to diagnose with any certainty. In the UK, most diagnoses are made on the basis of a computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest in a patient with appropriate risk factors (eg a patient who is profoundly immunocompromised with fever and/or other respiratory symptoms). Some radiological features are specific of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA): a nodule with surrounding attenuation (halo) is a key radiological sign. An air crescent sign is a late radiological sign resulting from organisation of a pulmonary sequestrum. More commonly, multiple nodules are the only radiological sign of infection. In reality, any radiological appearance can be seen (eg non-specific focal infiltrates, pleural effusion or pulmonary infiltrates with cavitation), which poses a significant diagnostic challenge.
Specific microbiological evidence of IA can be difficult to acquire. In many centres, serum galactomannan is increasingly used to establish a diagnosis of IA. Galactomannan is a large-molecular-weight polysaccharide that is secreted by Aspergillus hyphae (Fig 1). The sensitivity of this test can be compromised by mould-active prophylaxis or specific antifungal treatment (eg itraconazole) and also varies according to whether the patient has underlying neutropenia.3 The diagnostic performance of this test depends on the incidence and case mix. A bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) might not be possible because of poor respiratory reserve or other comorbidities. Positive cultures are only seen in approximately 50% of cases.3 Galactomannan in BAL fluid is increasingly used to establish a diagnosis of IPA, although there is some uncertainty about the precise cut-off that should be used to secure a diagnosis (a reading of >1 is often used).
Treatment
The treatment of IA is complex and requires specialist advice and consultation. In addition to choosing an appropriate antifungal agent and regimen, careful consideration should be given to modifying host factors (eg minimising immunosuppression), as well as providing adjunctive care (eg granulocyte colony-stimulating factor [G-CSF]). Surgery might be necessary to obtain a cure or at least debulk disease to enable successful medical therapy. The indications for surgery are not well defined, but include extensive surgically resectable disease near vital structures (eg mediastinum or great vessels).
Several first-line agents can be used to treat IA (Table 1). The choice largely rests between voriconazole and liposomal amphotericin B. Voriconazole is superior to amphotericin B deoxycholate for treatment of IA in a wide range of clinical scenarios.4 Amphotericin B deoxycholate is now not widely available in the UK. Voriconazole is available as an intravenous (IV) and oral preparation, which enables induction therapy followed by longer-term consolidation therapy. A dose of 6 mg/kg IV every 12 h for two dosages should be given, followed by 4 mg/kg every 12 h as IV maintenance. The dose for oral therapy is 200 mg every 12 h, with the possibility of increasing this to 300 mg every 12 h if clinically indicated. Voriconazole is certainly the drug of choice for treatment of cerebral aspergillosis, which is a devastating complication of disseminated disease.5 Increasing evidence suggests that therapeutic drug monitoring should be performed routinely.6 A trough concentration of 1 mg/l is a reasonable target, but higher concentration targets can be used if clinically indicated (eg central nervous system infection). An upper concentration target of 5–6 mg/l is recommended to minimise the probability of drug-related toxicity.6 Voriconazole exhibits well-described toxicities that are related to serum concentrations, including elevated liver function tests, confusion and hallucinations. Other short-term (and reversible) adverse effects include photopsia (a perception of flashing flights), which occurs in approximately 30% of patients, and is transitory and fully reversible. Longer-term toxicities include photosensitivity, which has been further complicated in some patients by the development of skin cancers. Consequently, patients should receive specific advice about protecting themselves from the sun, including the routine application of sunscreen. An alternative first-line agent for treatment of IA is liposomal amphotericin B (Table 1). A clinical trial of patients with IA suggested that the effect of a dose of 3 mg/kg/day is comparable to 10 mg/kg/day.7 A patient failing 3 mg/kg should have their antifungal therapy changed or another antifungal agent added. Liposomal amphotericin B has the advantage of having a broader-spectrum of activity compared with voriconazole, including activity against the Mucorales and triazole-resistant Aspergillus spp that are increasingly seen in Europe and other parts of the world. Liposomal amphotericin B causes acute infusional toxicity8 (manifests as any combination of chest pain, flank pain, leg pain, abdominal pain, dyspnoea, hypoxia, urticaria or flushing) as well as nephrotoxicity (manifests as decreased glomerular filtration rate or tubular toxicity with hypokalaemia and/or hypomagnesaemia).7
There are relatively few alternative agents or approaches for treatment of IA. The results of several clinical trials are pending and might provide some additional therapeutic avenues. The outcome of patients receiving a combination of voriconazole and anidulafungin vs voriconazole alone will be published in the near future. Furthermore, the results of a new triazole, isavuconazole vs voriconazole, will be available, which might provide an alternative agent for the treatment of IA. The echinocandins are generally not advocated as monotherapy for the primary treatment of IA, although they might be useful for salvage therapy.9 Similarly, posaconazole is not used for primary therapy, but might have a useful role for salvage therapy or longer-term consolidation therapy.10
Invasive candidiasis
Invasive candidiasis remains a significant cause of morbidity and mortality for some patient groups. Candidaemia is mostly seen in patients who are critically ill and non-neutropaenic. There are progressively fewer cases in patients with neutropenia, which is probably related to the better use of antifungal prophylaxis and other supportive measures in these patients. Risk factors include the presence of an intravenous catheter and the use of total parenteral nutrition. The most common cause of invasive candidiasis is Candida albicans. Other leading causes include Candida glabrata (often exhibits reduced susceptibility to fluconazole), Candida parapsilosis (exhibits reduced susceptibility to echinocandins), Candida krusei (resistant to fluconazole) and Candida tropicalis (leading cause of invasive candidiasis in India).
Diagnosis
Invasive candidiasis is mostly diagnosed using standard microbiological techniques. Blood cultures are the mainstay of the diagnosis, even though the sensitivity is known to be approximately 50–60%.11 Invasive candidiasis can also be diagnosed using samples taken from normally sterile sites (eg pancreatic bed). Some serological tests are available to aid in the diagnosis. Perhaps the most promising is 1,3-β-D glucan, for which there is a large amount of evidence.11 Unfortunately, this test is relatively difficult to perform and is still not widely available in many centres.
Treatment
The management of invasive candidiasis requires prompt initiation of antifungal therapy. Candida spp should never be dismissed as contaminants when isolated from blood cultures or other ordinarily sterile site. Relatively small delays (circa 12–24 h) in the initiation of antifungal therapy result in excessive mortality.12 Important additional therapeutic considerations include the removal (and potential replacement) of an intravenous catheter. A thorough search should be made for occult metastatic foci of infection. Candida endophthalmitis is a serious and potentially sight-threatening complication of disseminated infection that requires specialised management. Consequently, an ophthalmological examination should be performed on all patients with candidaemia and an ophthalmological opinion sought if there is any evidence or concern of endophthalmitis.
Several agents can be used to treat invasive candidiasis (Table 2). Recent evidence and treatment guidelines suggest that the echinocandins should be considered as first-line agents for initial treatment of invasive candidiasis.13,14 There is no clear evidence to distinguish caspofungin (70 mg/day as a loading dose followed by 50 mg/day),15 micafungin (100 mg/day)16 and anidulafungin (200 mg/day as a loading dose followed by 100 mg/day)17 for the treatment of candidaemia and invasive candidiasis: the spectrum of microbiological activity and clinical response rates in clinical trials of invasive candidiasis are comparable. The echinocandins have the distinct advantage of being safe to use in patients with renal and hepatic impairment.18 Furthermore, they have few adverse effects and few clinically significant drug–drug interactions. Nevertheless, one potential issue with their routine use is the treatment of C parapsilosis, which consistently demonstrates relatively high minimum inhibitory concentrations as a result of differences in the echinocandin target site (FKS1 gene); favourable clinical outcomes in invasive candidiasis caused by C parapsilosis were lower with anidulafungin, but not statistically inferior to fluconazole.17 Therefore, the decision to use an echinocandin for C parapsilosis depends on the clinical context. The echinocandins are probably the drug of choice for the treatment of C glabrata, which exhibits reduced susceptibility or even frank resistance to fluconazole. The echinocandins can also be used for the treatment of C krusei, which is inherently resistant to fluconazole.
Liposomal amphotericin B at 3 mg/kg can be used to treat invasive candidiasis.19 A clinical trial suggested that this agent produces response rates that are comparable to micafungin, although the rate of nephrotoxicity was predictably higher. Liposomal amphotericin B has an advantage of a broad spectrum of activity against medically important Candida spp. Fluconazole is still extensively used for the treatment of invasive candidiasis, is the agent of choice for consolidation therapy in most cases and can be used immediately after initial induction therapy with an echinocandin or liposomal amphotericin B. Potential exceptions include primary treatment for infections caused by C glabrata and C krusei. In these cases, voriconazole might be a suitable option, with all the caveats previously discussed for this compound when used for IA.
Conclusions
Invasive fungal infections continue to be a significant problem in a wide range of clinical contexts. There have been significant advances in therapeutic options for invasive infections caused by Aspergillus and Candida spp. Successful treatment of these opportunistic infections requires prompt diagnosis and aggressive therapy with antifungal agents.
- © 2013 Royal College of Physicians
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