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707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution

INTRODUCTION: Burn patients have higher infection rates due to loss of the protective skin barrier. The past decade shows increased rates of burn infection with atypical invasive fungal organisms. After a recent trend of life-threatening atypical fungal burn infections at our hospital, we conducted...

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Autores principales: Akhavan, Arya A, Shamoun, Feras, Lagziel, Tomer, Rostami, Sohayla, Cox, Carrie A, Cooney, Carisa M, Hultman, Charles S, Caffrey, Julie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8945929/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.261
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author Akhavan, Arya A
Shamoun, Feras
Lagziel, Tomer
Rostami, Sohayla
Cox, Carrie A
Cooney, Carisa M
Hultman, Charles S
Caffrey, Julie
author_facet Akhavan, Arya A
Shamoun, Feras
Lagziel, Tomer
Rostami, Sohayla
Cox, Carrie A
Cooney, Carisa M
Hultman, Charles S
Caffrey, Julie
author_sort Akhavan, Arya A
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Burn patients have higher infection rates due to loss of the protective skin barrier. The past decade shows increased rates of burn infection with atypical invasive fungal organisms. After a recent trend of life-threatening atypical fungal burn infections at our hospital, we conducted this study to further characterize this. METHODS: We identified patients admitted to our burn center from January 2008 to June 2021, who developed fungal non-Candida burn infections while admitted. We gathered demographic data, burn injury details, surgical treatment course, and fungal and bacterial infection data. Descriptive statistics were used to characterize the data and identify trends. RESULTS: We identified 37 acute burn patients with atypical invasive fungal infections. Of these, 28 were infected with 1 species, and 9 were infected with multiple fungi. Non-Candida fungi included Aspergillus (20), Fusarium (8), Mucor (6), and 11 other species. Three fungi were resistant to antifungals including amphotericin B. Other organisms included Candida (18), Enterococcus (13), Pseudomonas (9), and 19 other species. On average, patients were infected with 5 bacteria, had 13 antibacterial resistances, and required 6.5 antibacterials. There was one case of total-drug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Every patient required Infectious Disease consultation. Eight patients became bacteremic and 1 became fungemic. The average burn surface area was 35%. All patients required excisional treatment, with an average of 7 excisions, 7 coverage procedures, and 3.5 other procedures; 44% of patients required amputations for infection control. The most common complications were graft loss (39%), ventilator-associated pneumonia (28%), and death (28%). The median length of stay was 40 days (IQR = 89) for survivors and 28 days (IQR = 14) for nonsurvivors. All fatalities were from overwhelming polymicrobial infection. The average modified Baux score was 73 (± 28) for survivors and 102 (± 38) for nonsurvivors. All nonsurvivors had clean wounds without penetrating trauma. CONCLUSIONS: Burn patients with atypical invasive fungal infections have severe polymicrobial infections and extreme antibiotic resistance. Patients may require, or fail, treatment with last-line antibiotic therapy and amputation. Early Infectious Disease consultation and aggressive treatment is critical. Further research may elucidate risk factors and ideal treatment patterns.
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spelling pubmed-89459292022-03-28 707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution Akhavan, Arya A Shamoun, Feras Lagziel, Tomer Rostami, Sohayla Cox, Carrie A Cooney, Carisa M Hultman, Charles S Caffrey, Julie J Burn Care Res Clinical Sciences: Critical Care 4 INTRODUCTION: Burn patients have higher infection rates due to loss of the protective skin barrier. The past decade shows increased rates of burn infection with atypical invasive fungal organisms. After a recent trend of life-threatening atypical fungal burn infections at our hospital, we conducted this study to further characterize this. METHODS: We identified patients admitted to our burn center from January 2008 to June 2021, who developed fungal non-Candida burn infections while admitted. We gathered demographic data, burn injury details, surgical treatment course, and fungal and bacterial infection data. Descriptive statistics were used to characterize the data and identify trends. RESULTS: We identified 37 acute burn patients with atypical invasive fungal infections. Of these, 28 were infected with 1 species, and 9 were infected with multiple fungi. Non-Candida fungi included Aspergillus (20), Fusarium (8), Mucor (6), and 11 other species. Three fungi were resistant to antifungals including amphotericin B. Other organisms included Candida (18), Enterococcus (13), Pseudomonas (9), and 19 other species. On average, patients were infected with 5 bacteria, had 13 antibacterial resistances, and required 6.5 antibacterials. There was one case of total-drug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Every patient required Infectious Disease consultation. Eight patients became bacteremic and 1 became fungemic. The average burn surface area was 35%. All patients required excisional treatment, with an average of 7 excisions, 7 coverage procedures, and 3.5 other procedures; 44% of patients required amputations for infection control. The most common complications were graft loss (39%), ventilator-associated pneumonia (28%), and death (28%). The median length of stay was 40 days (IQR = 89) for survivors and 28 days (IQR = 14) for nonsurvivors. All fatalities were from overwhelming polymicrobial infection. The average modified Baux score was 73 (± 28) for survivors and 102 (± 38) for nonsurvivors. All nonsurvivors had clean wounds without penetrating trauma. CONCLUSIONS: Burn patients with atypical invasive fungal infections have severe polymicrobial infections and extreme antibiotic resistance. Patients may require, or fail, treatment with last-line antibiotic therapy and amputation. Early Infectious Disease consultation and aggressive treatment is critical. Further research may elucidate risk factors and ideal treatment patterns. Oxford University Press 2022-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8945929/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.261 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Sciences: Critical Care 4
Akhavan, Arya A
Shamoun, Feras
Lagziel, Tomer
Rostami, Sohayla
Cox, Carrie A
Cooney, Carisa M
Hultman, Charles S
Caffrey, Julie
707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution
title 707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution
title_full 707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution
title_fullStr 707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution
title_full_unstemmed 707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution
title_short 707 Invasive Non-Candida Fungal Infections in Acute Burns: A 13-Year Review of a Single Institution
title_sort 707 invasive non-candida fungal infections in acute burns: a 13-year review of a single institution
topic Clinical Sciences: Critical Care 4
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8945929/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irac012.261
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