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Epidemiology of Mucormycosis in Greece; Results from a Nationwide Prospective Survey and Published Case Reports

Authors :
Maria Drogari-Apiranthitou
Anna Skiada
Ioannis Panayiotides
Timoleon-Achilleas Vyzantiadis
Aikaterina Poulopoulou
Myrto Christofidou
Anastasia Antoniadou
Emmanuel Roilides
Elias Iosifidis
Vassiliki Mamali
Athina Argyropoulou
Styliani Sympardi
Nikoletta Charalampaki
Nikolaos Antonakos
Paraskevi Mantzana
Zafeiria Mastora
Ourania Nicolatou-Galitis
Maria Orfanidou
Zoi-Dorothea Pana
Ioannis Pavleas
Angelos Pefanis
Vissaria Sakka
Anastasia Spiliopoulou
Maria Stamouli
Polydoros Tofas
Eleni Vagiakou
George Petrikkos
Source :
Journal of Fungi, Vol 9, Iss 4, p 425 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

Mucormycosis has emerged as a group of severe infections mainly in immunocompromised patients. We analysed the epidemiology of mucormycosis in Greece in a multicentre, nationwide prospective survey of patients of all ages, during 2005–2022. A total of 108 cases were recorded. The annual incidence declined after 2009 and appeared stable thereafter, at 0.54 cases/million population. The most common forms were rhinocerebral (51.8%), cutaneous (32.4%), and pulmonary (11.1%). Main underlying conditions were haematologic malignancy/neutropenia (29.9%), haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (4.7%), diabetes mellitus (DM) (15.9%), other immunodeficiencies (23.4%), while 22.4% of cases involved immunocompetent individuals with cutaneous/soft-tissue infections after motor vehicle accident, surgical/iatrogenic trauma, burns, and injuries associated with natural disasters. Additionally, DM or steroid-induced DM was reported as a comorbidity in 21.5% of cases with various main conditions. Rhizopus (mostly R. arrhizus) predominated (67.1%), followed by Lichtheimia (8.5%) and Mucor (6.1%). Antifungal treatment consisted mainly of liposomal amphotericin B (86.3%), median dose 7 mg/kg/day, range 3–10 mg/kg/day, with or without posaconazole. Crude mortality was 62.8% during 2005–2008 but decreased significantly after 2009, at 34.9% (p = 0.02), with four times fewer haematological cases, fewer iatrogenic infections, and fewer cases with advanced rhinocerebral form. The increased DM prevalence should alert clinicians for timely diagnosis of mucormycosis in this patient population.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2309608X
Volume :
9
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Fungi
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.765f8f54c9954e48bc68dfdf6e8a39fd
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof9040425