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Mycobacterial Infection: A Difficult and Late Diagnosis in Stem Cell Transplant Recipients

Authors :
Andrew J. Ullmann
J. Gmür
Emilio Paolo Alessandrino
J. Pretnar
Plínio Trabasso
Per Ljungman
Simona Sica
Catherine Cordonnier
T. K. Held
R. Varela
K. Fabian
Hamdi Akan
Montserrat Rovira
Antonin Vitek
N. Wulffraat
M. S. Ward
Rodrigo Martino
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases. 38:1229-1236
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2004.

Abstract

The Infectious Diseases Working Party of the European Blood and Marrow Transplant Group conducted a survey to obtain information about the frequency, presentation, and treatment of mycobacterial infection (MBI) in stem cell transplant (SCT) recipients. Among 29 centers, MBI was diagnosed in 0.79% of 1513 allogeneic and 0.23% of 3012 autologous SCT recipients during 1994-1998 a median of 160 days after transplantation. The mean interval between first symptoms and diagnosis was 29 days and was still longer for patients with atypical MBI or recipients of corticosteroid therapy. The prevalence of MBI was highest among those who received matched unrelated or mismatched STCs from related donors. Of 31 patients, 20 had tuberculosis, 8 had atypical MBI, and 3 had diagnoses based on histological findings only. Five patients (16%) died, all of whom had received an allogeneic SCT. Because of the increased numbers of unmatched donors and transplantation programs in countries with a high prevalence of tuberculosis, constant vigilance is required to early detect MBI in SCT recipients.

Details

ISSN :
15376591 and 10584838
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....db219f879438be01b509c5eca8d47bd9