1. Post-cardiac surgery fungal mediastinitis: clinical features, pathogens and outcome.
- Author
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Hariri G, Genoud M, Bruckert V, Chosidow S, Guérot E, Kimmoun A, Nesseler N, Besnier E, Daviaud F, Lagier D, Imbault J, Grimaldi D, Bouglé A, and Mongardon N
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Candida, Belgium, Mediastinitis epidemiology, Mediastinitis microbiology, Cardiac Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Cardiac Surgical Procedures methods
- Abstract
Objectives: The occurrence of mediastinitis after cardiac surgery remains a rare and severe complication associated with poor outcomes. Whereas bacterial mediastinitis have been largely described, little is known about their fungal etiologies. We report incidence, characteristics and outcome of post-cardiac surgery fungal mediastinitis., Methods: Multicenter retrospective study among 10 intensive care units (ICU) in France and Belgium of proven cases of fungal mediastinitis after cardiac surgery (2009-2019)., Results: Among 73,688 cardiac surgery procedures, 40 patients developed fungal mediastinitis. Five were supported with left ventricular assist device and five with veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation before initial surgery. Twelve patients received prior heart transplantation. Interval between initial surgery and mediastinitis was 38 [17-61] days. Only half of the patients showed local signs of infection. Septic shock was uncommon at diagnosis (12.5%). Forty-three fungal strains were identified: Candida spp. (34 patients), Trichosporon spp. (5 patients) and Aspergillus spp. (4 patients). Hospital mortality was 58%. Survivors were younger (59 [43-65] vs. 65 [61-73] yo; p = 0.013), had lower body mass index (24 [20-26] vs. 30 [24-32] kg/m
2 ; p = 0.028) and lower Simplified Acute Physiology Score II score at ICU admission (37 [28-40] vs. 54 [34-61]; p = 0.012)., Conclusion: Fungal mediastinitis is a very rare complication after cardiac surgery, associated with a high mortality rate. This entity should be suspected in patients with a smoldering infectious postoperative course, especially those supported with short- or long-term invasive cardiac support devices, or following heart transplantation., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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