Candida
Candida
Candida
Sara Abolghasemi
Infectious diseases specialist
Fellowship of infection in immunocompromised
patients
Candida spp. infections are the most frequent
fungal(78%) infections in the Intensive Care Unit
(ICU), ranking the third most common isolated
pathogen and the fourth most common cause of
nosocomial bloodstream infection
Outcome of Candida invasive infections:
Increase costs
High mortality
Non-albicans Candida species constitute
approximately 50% of all relevant isolates
C. glabrata
16% Adapted from Pfaller MA et al and The SENTRY
Participant Group Antimicrob Agents Chemother
2000;44:747–751.
Prophylaxis
Empiric treatment
Pre-emptive treatment
Prophylaxis :
Candida colonization,
severity of illness,
exposure to broad spectrum antibiotics,
recent major surgery, particularly abdominal surgery,
necrotizing pancreatitis,
dialysis,
parenteral nutrition,
corticosteroids,
and the use of CVCs
IDSA
Empiric antifungal therapy should be started as soon
as possible in patients who have the above risk factors
and who have clinical signs of septic shock (strong
recommendation; moderate- quality evidence).
In those patients who have septic shock due to
Candida species and who do not have adequate source
control or antifungal therapy begun within 24 hours,
the mortality approaches 100%
Prompt initiation of appropriate antifungal therapy has
been associated with as much as a 50% reduction in
mortality
IDSA
criteria for starting empirical antifungal therapy in ICU
patients are poorly defined and recent IDSA guidelines
suggesting that “empirical antifungal therapy should
be considered in
critically ill patients with risk factors for invasive
candidiasis and no other known cause of fever” could
lead to an overuse of antifungal agents.
In 2006, a Spanish group, using the database of the
Estudio de Prevalencia de CANdidiasis project,
identified four predictors of proven invasive Candida
infection .
Based on these predictors, a score named “Candida
score” was built.
there are many concerns about these rules: high
specificity but low sensitivity, no prospective
validation, and complicated use.
Ostrosky-Zeichner:
Any systemic antibiotic (days 1–3) OR
CVC (days 1–3)
AND
at least TWO of the following:
TPN (days 1–3), any dialysis (days 1–3), any major
surgery (days 7–0), pancreatitis (days 7–0), steroid use
(days -7–3). other immunosuppressive drug (days 7–0)
IDSA: Pre-emptive
Empiric antifungal therapy should be considered in
critically ill patients with risk factors for invasive
candidiasis and no other known cause of fever and should
be based on clinical assessment of risk factors, surrogate
markers for invasive candidiasis, and/or culture data from
nonsterile sites (strong recommendation; moderate-quality
evidence).
Strategies for initiating empiric antifungal therapy include
an evaluation of risk factors and use of surrogate
markers.
Candida tests
β-D-glucan,
Antibodies against C. albicans germ tubes (CAGTA)
Mannan-antimannan antibodies,
VITEK 2
PCR
PNA-FISH YTL
MALDI-TOF MS
β-D-glucan
cell wall constituent of Candida species, Aspergillus
species, Pneumocystis jiroveci, and several other fungi.
Approved by the FDA as an adjunct to cultures for the
diagnosis of invasive fungal infections (Fungitell;
Associates of Cape Cod, East Falmouth, Massachusetts)
the pooled sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing
invasive candidiasis were 75%– 80% and 80%,
respectively .
True-positive results are not specific for invasive
candidiasis, but rather suggest the possibility of an
invasive fungal infection.
β-D-glucan detection can identify cases of invasive
candidiasis days to weeks prior to positive blood
cultures, and shorten the time to initiation of antifungal
therapy .
On the one hand, antifungal agents may reduce
diagnostic sensitivity , but decreasing β-D-glucan
levels may also correlate with responses to antifungal
therapy .
Causes of false positivity include:
other systemic infections, such as gram-positive and
gram-negative bacteremia,
certain antibiotics, such as intravenous amoxicillin-
clavulanate,
hemodialysis,
fungal colonization,
receipt of albumin or immunoglobulin,
use of surgical gauze or other material containing glucan,
and mucositis or other disruptions of gastrointestinal
mucosa
The specificity of β-Dglucan can be improved by
requiring consecutive positive results rather than a
single result, but false positivity remains a significant
limitation if the above-listed factors are common.