1. Prevalence of co-existent COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA) and its impact on early mortality in patients with COVID-19-associated pulmonary mucormycosis (CAPM).
- Author
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Muthu V, Agarwal R, Rudramurthy SM, Thangaraju D, Shevkani MR, Patel AK, Shastri PS, Tayade A, Bhandari S, Gella V, Savio J, Madan S, Hallur V, Maturu VN, Srinivasan A, Sethuraman N, Sibia RPS, Pujari S, Mehta R, Singhal T, Saxena P, Gupta V, Nagvekar V, Prayag P, Patel D, Xess I, Savaj P, Sehgal IS, Panda N, Rajagopal GD, Parwani RS, Patel K, Deshmukh A, Vyas A, Gandra RR, Sistla SK, Padaki PA, Ramar D, Panigrahi MK, Sarkar S, Rachagulla B, Vallandaramam P, Premachandran KP, Pawar S, Gugale P, Hosamani P, Dutt SN, Nair S, Kalpakkam H, Badhwar S, Kompella KK, Singla N, Navlakhe M, Prayag A, Singh G, Dhakecha P, and Chakrabarti A
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Prevalence, India epidemiology, Adult, Pulmonary Aspergillosis complications, Pulmonary Aspergillosis mortality, Pulmonary Aspergillosis epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Lung Diseases, Fungal mortality, Lung Diseases, Fungal complications, Lung Diseases, Fungal epidemiology, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 mortality, Mucormycosis mortality, Mucormycosis epidemiology, Mucormycosis complications, Coinfection mortality, Coinfection epidemiology, Coinfection microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Data on mixed mould infection with COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA) and COVID-19-associated pulmonary mucormycosis (CAPM) are sparse., Objectives: To ascertain the prevalence of co-existent CAPA in CAPM (mixed mould infection) and whether mixed mould infection is associated with early mortality (≤7 days of diagnosis)., Methods: We retrospectively analysed the data collected from 25 centres across India on COVID-19-associated mucormycosis. We included only CAPM and excluded subjects with disseminated or rhino-orbital mucormycosis. We defined co-existent CAPA if a respiratory specimen showed septate hyphae on smear, histopathology or culture grew Aspergillus spp. We also compare the demography, predisposing factors, severity of COVID-19, and management of CAPM patients with and without CAPA. Using a case-control design, we assess whether mixed mould infection (primary exposure) were associated with early mortality in CAPM., Results: We included 105 patients with CAPM. The prevalence of mixed mould infection was 20% (21/105). Patients with mixed mould infection experienced early mortality (9/21 [42.9%] vs. 15/84 [17.9%]; p = 0.02) and poorer survival at 6 weeks (7/21 [33.3] vs. 46/77 [59.7%]; p = 0.03) than CAPM alone. On imaging, consolidation was more commonly encountered with mixed mould infections than CAPM. Co-existent CAPA (odds ratio [95% confidence interval], 19.1 [2.62-139.1]) was independently associated with early mortality in CAPM after adjusting for hypoxemia during COVID-19 and other factors., Conclusion: Coinfection of CAPA and CAPM was not uncommon in our CAPM patients and portends a worse prognosis. Prospective studies from different countries are required to know the impact of mixed mould infection., (© 2024 Wiley‐VCH GmbH. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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