Central nervous system candidiasis beyond neonates: Lessons from a nationwide study

Author:

Chaussade Hélène12,Cazals Xavier3,Desoubeaux Guillaume4,Jouvion Gregory56,Bougnoux Marie-Elisabeth7,Lefort Agnes8,Rivoisy Claire1,Desnos-Ollivier Marie9,Chretien Fabrice5,Chouaki Taieb10,Gruson Bérengère11,Bernard Louis2,Lortholary Olivier19,Lanternier Fanny19,

Affiliation:

1. Université de Paris, Service de maladies infectieuses, hôpital Universitaire Necker-Enfants malades, Assistance Publique – Hôpitaux de Paris, IHU Imagine, Paris, France

2. Service de médecine interne et maladies infectieuses, Tours, France

3. Service de neuroradiologie, Tours, France

4. Service de parasitologie – mycologie – médecine tropicale, Tours, France

5. Unité histopathologie humaine et modèles animaux, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France

6. Université de la Sorbonne, INSERM, Maladies génétiques d'expression pédiatrique, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Hôpital Armand-Trousseau, UF Génétique moléculaire, Paris, France

7. Université de Paris, Unité de Parasitologie-mycologie, Hôpital Necker, Paris, France

8. Service de médecine interne, Hôpital Beaujon, Clichy, France

9. Institut Pasteur, Unité de Mycologie Moléculaire, UMR 2000, CNR des Mycoses Invasives et antifongiques, Paris, France

10. Laboratoire de mycologie et parasitologie, Amiens, France

11. Service d'hématologie, Amiens, France

Abstract

Abstract Though candidiasis is the most frequent invasive fungal infection, Candida spp. central nervous system (CNS) infections are rare but severe. To further describe clinico-patho-radiological presentations of this entity, we report a retrospective study from January 2005 to December 2018 including patients aged ≥ 28 days with proven or probable CNS candidiasis in France. Twenty-four patients were included. Seventeen patients (70%) had CNS localization secondary to disseminated candidiasis (10 with hematologic malignancies [HM]; the seven other patients had infective endocarditis [IE]). Among patients with HM, seven previously had lumbar puncture for intrathecal chemotherapy, the three others had IE. Among patients with disseminated infection, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) evidenced meningitis (17%), micro-abscesses (58%), or vascular complications (67%). Seven patients (30%) had isolated CNS involvement related to neurosurgery (n = 2), CARD9 deficiency (n = 2), intravenous drug use, diabetes mellitus, or no identified predisposing condition (n = 1 each). All evaluated patients with isolated CNS involvement had meningitis on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and intracranial hypertension. For the latter patients, MRI evidenced meningitis (71%) or abscesses (57%). Among all patients, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) culture grew Candida spp. in 31% of cases. CSF βDGlucan or mannan Ag were positive in respectively 86% and 80% of cases. Mortality attributed to CNS candidiasis was 42%: 53% in case of disseminated infection (70% for HM) and 14% in case of localized infection. CNS candidiasis are isolated or occur during disseminated infection in patients with HM and lumbar puncture for intrathecal chemotherapy or during IE. Clinical, radiological finding and outcome highly vary according to CNS localized versus disseminated candidiasis. Lay Summary Candida is a yeast and is the most common cause of fungal infections worldwide. Candida central nervous system (CNS) infections are rare, severe, and poorly described. We report a retrospective study from January 2005 to December 2018 including patients aged ≥ 28 days with proven or probable CNS candidiasis in France. Twenty-four patients were included (14 men, median age 51 years). Seventeen patients had CNS localization secondary to disseminated candidiasis from blood to CNS (10 with hematologic malignancies [HM], the seven other patients had infective endocarditis [IE]). Seven patients had isolated CNS involvement related to neurosurgery (n = 2), CARD9 deficiency (n = 2), intravenous drug use (n = 1), diabetes mellitus (n = 1), or no identified risk factor (n = 1). During Candida CNS infections, brain lesions were meningitis abscesses or vascular complications. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) culture grew Candida spp. in 31% of cases. Forty-two percent of patients died from infection: 53% in case of disseminated infection (70% for HM) and 14% in case of localized infection.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,General Medicine

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