301. Coccidioidomycosis: a descriptive survey of a reemerging disease. Clinical characteristics and current controversies.
- Author
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Crum NF, Lederman ER, Stafford CM, Parrish JS, and Wallace MR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Child, Child, Preschool, Coccidioidomycosis diagnosis, Coccidioidomycosis drug therapy, Cohort Studies, Communicable Diseases, Emerging diagnosis, Communicable Diseases, Emerging drug therapy, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Immunoenzyme Techniques, Infant, Lung Diseases, Fungal diagnosis, Lung Diseases, Fungal drug therapy, Lung Diseases, Fungal epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Military Medicine, Retrospective Studies, Serologic Tests, Coccidioidomycosis epidemiology, Communicable Diseases, Emerging epidemiology
- Abstract
Coccidioidomycosis is a fungal disease with protean manifestations endemic to the Lower Sonoran Life Zone, which includes the hot deserts of the southwestern United States and areas of Mexico. Two hundred and twenty-three patients were found to have coccidioidomycosis at our institution from 1994-2002, the largest reported cohort of coccidioidomycosis patients since the 1950s. Of these patients, 58% presented with isolated pulmonary disease, 14% had high (>1:16) complement fixation titers without clear evidence of dissemination, 22% had definite disseminated disease, and 5% had unclassified disease. Enzyme immunoassay was a reliable diagnostic tool in those with symptomatic disease, but had a low specificity in those who were asymptomatic. Complement fixation titers of > or =1:16 were associated with dissemination to bone or skin but were not helpful in evaluating central nervous system disease. Thirteen percent of patients with high complement fixation titers (>1:16) without clear evidence of dissemination on presentation and 7% of those with isolated pulmonary disease eventually progressed to disseminated disease; 30% of Filipino patients with pulmonary disease progressed to disseminated disease. Nonwhite race was a predictor for dissemination; African American patients more often developed disseminated bony disease while Filipinos were more likely to develop cutaneous or central nervous system disease. Relapse of disseminated coccidioidomycosis occurred in 24% of patients; the risk was highest (71%) among those with central nervous system disease. Azole therapy was generally inferior to amphotericin B in disseminated disease. Predictors of permanent disability included African American or Filipino race, central nervous system disease, and bony disease.
- Published
- 2004
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