Liver Transpl Surg. 1999 Jan;5(1):16-24.
Candida infection in pediatric liver transplant recipients.
Source
Department of General Surgery, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.Abstract
A
retrospective review of 100 liver transplantations in 98 children was
performed to determine the incidence of infection caused by Candida
organism in these patients and to identify risk factors that may
predispose to serious fungal infection. Thirty-one infections caused by
Candida organisms developed during the initial 28 days
posttransplantation: 19 were definite invasive infections (one deep site
or one positive blood culture), 2 were probable invasive infections
(three superficial sites), and 10 were urinary tract infections. Eleven
of 19 patients had fungemia or a disseminated infection (two
noncontiguous deep organs involved and/or positive blood cultures) and 8
of 19 had peritoneal candidiasis. Infection caused by Candida organisms
was a contributing factor to mortality in 7 of 21 patients (case
fatality rate of 33%) with invasive infection. Risk factors that were
predictive for invasive infection by univariate analysis included the
following: pretransplantation antibiotic therapy, length of transplant
operation, transfusion requirement, number of days in the intensive care
unit, number of days intubated, number of concurrent bacterial
infections, number of antibiotics administered, number of laparotomies
performed posttransplantation, retransplantation, hepatic artery
thrombosis, bile leaks, and renal and respiratory failure. By logistic
regression analysis, bile leak, hepatic artery thrombosis, preoperative
steroid use, transfusion requirement, and the number of days intubated
were identified as independent risk factors for invasive infection
caused by Candida organisms. The use of prophylactic antifungal agents
in high-risk patients may be important in reducing the serious morbidity
and mortality associated with sepsis caused by Candida organisms in
pediatric liver transplant recipients.
- PMID:
- 9873087
- [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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