Comparison and temporal trends of three groups with cryptococcosis: HIV-infected, solid organ transplant, and HIV-negative/non-transplant

EW Bratton, N El Husseini, CA Chastain, MS Lee… - 2012 - journals.plos.org
EW Bratton, N El Husseini, CA Chastain, MS Lee, C Poole, T Stürmer, JJ Juliano, DJ Weber…
2012journals.plos.org
Background The Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) 2010 Clinical Practice
Guidelines for the management of cryptococcosis outlined three key populations at risk of
disease:(1) HIV-infected,(2) transplant recipient, and (3) HIV-negative/non-transplant.
However, direct comparisons of management, severity and outcomes of these groups have
not been conducted. Methodology/Principal Findings Annual changes in frequency of
cryptococcosis diagnoses, cryptococcosis-attributable mortality and mortality were captured …
Background
The Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) 2010 Clinical Practice Guidelines for the management of cryptococcosis outlined three key populations at risk of disease: (1) HIV-infected, (2) transplant recipient, and (3) HIV-negative/non-transplant. However, direct comparisons of management, severity and outcomes of these groups have not been conducted.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Annual changes in frequency of cryptococcosis diagnoses, cryptococcosis-attributable mortality and mortality were captured. Differences examined between severe and non-severe disease within the context of the three groups included: demographics, symptoms, microbiology, clinical management and treatment. An average of nearly 15 patients per year presented at Duke University Medical Center (DUMC) with cryptococcosis. Out of 207 study patients, 86 (42%) were HIV-positive, 42 (20%) were transplant recipients, and 79 (38%) were HIV-negative/non-transplant. HIV-infected individuals had profound CD4 lymphocytopenia and a majority had elevated intracranial pressure. Transplant recipients commonly (38%) had renal dysfunction. Nearly one-quarter (24%) had their immunosuppressive regimens stopped or changed. The HIV-negative/non-transplant population reported longer duration of symptoms than HIV-positive or transplant recipients and 28% (22/79) had liver insufficiency or underlying hematological malignancies. HIV-positive and HIV-negative/non-transplant patients accounted for 89% of severe disease cryptococcosis-attributable deaths and 86% of all-cause mortality.
Conclusions/Significance
In this single-center study, the frequency of cryptococcosis did not change in the last two decades, although the underlying case mix shifted (fewer HIV-positive cases, stable transplant cases, more cases with neither). Cryptococcosis had a relatively uniform and informed treatment strategy, but disease-attributable mortality was still common.
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