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Invasive aspergillosis in a medical ICU

 

 

Wouter Meersseman

University Hospital Leuven, Belgium
Internal Medicine and Critical Care
Herestraat 49
BE – 3000 Leuven
E-mail: wouter.meersseman@uz.kuleuven.ac.be

 

 
 

 

 

 

Using criteria designed for invasive aspergillosis (IA) in neutropenic patients, the present study aimed to determine the impact of invasive aspergillosis in different groups of nonhaemato-oncological ICU patients. It is a retrospective analysis of all patients that were hospitalized in the 17-bed medical intensive care unit (MICU) between January ‘2000 and January ‘2003.
The inclusion criteria were one or more of the following criteria: (a) microbiological evidence of aspergillosis during stay in the MICU (any positive culture or positive circulating galactomannan) or (b) histopathological evidence of aspergillosis (including autopsy). IA was classified as proven, probable or possible, according to the EORTC/MSG definitions. Aspergillus isolation from a non-sterile site in patients without appropriate clinical setting was considered as “colonization”.
Between 2000 and 2003, 89 of 1850 patients (4.8%) fulfilled the inclusion criteria.
There were 37 COPD patients, 9 patients with solid organ transplant recipients, 17 patients with autoimmune diseases, 6 cirrhosis patients and 20 patients with miscellaneous diseases.  Following the EORTC/MSG criteria, the  patients were classified as proven IA (n=30), probable IA (n=37), possible IA (n=2) and “colonization”  (n=20). Mean SAPS II score was 52 with a predicted mortality of 48.6%. Overall mortality was 80% (n=71). Mortality in the proven and probable group was 96,7% and 86,5%, respectively. Among the 18  patients who survived, ten just had “colonization” with Aspergillus and didn’t have risk factors for IA.
Postmortem examination was done in 47 out of 71 patients (67%) and 29/47 autopsies (62%) showed hyphael invasion with Aspergillus (mainly the lung as target organ).  Among the proven cases (n=30), 29 underwent autopsy (autopsy rate 97%), 1 patient with lupus had a positive bronchial biopsy , was treated and survived. The other autopsies were recruited out of the probable group (n=14, autopsy rate 44%) and the group with “colonization” for Aspergillus (n=4, autopsy rate 40%).
There were 5 out of the 30 proven cases who didn’t have compromising host factors according to the EORTC/MSG definitions (3 liver cirrhosis, 1 pneumonia in a 95yr old man, 1 Klebsiella sepsis with MOF).
In conclusion, our study proved that IA is an emerging infectious disease in ICU nonhaemato-oncological patients and there is a broad group of patients, who are at risk of IA. IA was diagnosed in patients without characteristics described in the EORTC/MSG definitions. It seems worthwile to investigate the validity of the available diagnosic tools in that group of patients.

Reference
Meersseman W, Vandecasteele SJ, Wilmer A, Verbeken E,  Peetermans WE, Van Wijngaerden E.  Invasive aspergillosis in critically ill patients without malignancy.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2004 Sep 15;170(6):621-5.