Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8827230 | Transplantation Proceedings | 2018 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
A 42-year-old female patient presented with gastric pain and melena 26 days after transplantation. Evaluation with upper endoscopy showed two bleeding gastric ulcers. Histological examination of gastric specimens revealed fungal hyphae with evidence of Mucormycetes at subsequent molecular analysis. Immunosuppressive therapy was reduced and antifungal therapy consisting of liposomal amphotericin B and posaconazole was promptly introduced. Gastrointestinal side effects of posaconazole and acute T-cell rejection of renal graft complicated management of the case. A prolonged course of daily injections of amphotericin B together with a slight increase of immunosuppression favored successful treatment of mucormycosis as well as of graft rejection. At 2-year follow-up, the woman was found to have maintained normal renal and liver function. We conclude that judicious personalization of antimicrobial and antirejection therapy should be considered to resolve every life-threatening case of mucormycosis in solid organ transplantation.
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Authors
G. Alfano, F. Fontana, D. Francesca, G. Assirati, P. Magistri, G. Tarantino, R. Ballarin, G. Rossi, E. Franceschini, M. Codeluppi, G. Guaraldi, C. Mussini, F. Di Benedetto, G. Cappelli,