4.6 Article

Comprehensive Analysis and Risk Identification of Pulmonary Cryptococcosis in Non-HIV Patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 7, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof7080657

Keywords

pulmonary cryptococcosis; non-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV); comorbidity; cryptococcal antigen (CrAg); Cryptococcus spp

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The study found that the majority of patients with pulmonary cryptococcosis in the non-HIV-infected population had comorbidities, with those having multiple comorbidities more likely to have multilobar and extrapulmonary involvement and a poor prognosis. Age, blood CrAg titer, and multiple comorbidities could act as risk factors for predicting the extent of disease and outcome.
Pulmonary cryptococcosis in the non-human immunodeficiency virus-infected population is uncommon. We aimed to explore the relevance between clinical presentations, radiological findings, and comorbidities and identify the outcome predictors. A total of 321 patients at Taichung Veterans General Hospital between 2005 and 2019 were included; of them, 204 (63.6%) had at least one comorbidity, while 67 (20.9%) had two or more. The most common comorbidities were diabetes mellitus (27.4%), malignant solid tumor (19.6%), autoimmune disease (15.6%), and chronic kidney disease (8.4%). Patients experiencing comorbidity, particularly those with multiple comorbidities, had a higher multilobar and extrapulmonary involvement, which could explain these patients being more symptomatic. In the overall population, extrapulmonary involvement independently predicted disease recurrence and death. Amongst patients with isolated pulmonary cryptococcosis, age, cryptococcal antigen (CrAg) titer in blood, and comorbidities not only predicted the extent of disease, but also its outcome. Of note, patients simultaneously with age >= 65 years, CrAg test >= 1:128, and multiple comorbidities had the lowest disease control of antifungal treatment (76.9%) and the highest rate of disease recurrence or death from any cause (40.0%). In conclusion, approximately two-thirds of patients had at least one underlying comorbidity. In addition to extrapulmonary involvement, old age, high CrAg titer in blood, and multiple comorbidities could act as risk factors for predicting the extent of disease and outcome.

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