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Clinical Characteristics and Outcome of Invasive Fungal Sinusitis in Children with Hematological Malignancies.

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Invasive fungal sinusitis (IFS) is a rare disease that requires careful attention and prompts management due to its high mortality among pediatric patients with hematological malignancies. This is a retrospective… Click to show full abstract

Invasive fungal sinusitis (IFS) is a rare disease that requires careful attention and prompts management due to its high mortality among pediatric patients with hematological malignancies. This is a retrospective analysis of pediatric patients with hematological malignancies treated at Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt 57357 (CCHE) through the period from 2008 till 2016 with proven IFS. Thirty-four patients were diagnosed with IFS. Five (15%) patients had an invasive rhino-cerebral fungal disease. Mucorales were isolated in 50% (n = 17) patients, Aspergillus in 38%(n = 13) patients, and mixed fungal in 12%(n = 4) patients. Sinuses were the only localized site in (45%). Extra-nasal spread was reported in 20 patients; Sino-pulmonary in 35%(n = 12), Sino-cerebral in 15%(n = 5), and Sino-orbital in 5%(n = 2) patients. Combined antifungal therapy with surgical debridement was done in 59% of patients with a better outcome when compared to those who received only medical antifungal treatment (P = 0.01). The overall mortality rate at week 12 was 35% (n = 12), and IFS attributable mortality was 20% (n = 7). IFS with cerebral extension carried the highest mortality rate for both 12-week all-cause (P = 0.04) and fungal-attributable (P = 0.01) mortality. Pediatric patients with hematologic malignancies are susceptible to invasive fungal sinusitis (IFS). Surgical debridement, combined with antifungal therapy, improves outcomes among those patients. IFS patients with cerebral extension had a higher risk of mortality.

Keywords: invasive fungal; fungal sinusitis; mortality; hematological malignancies; fungal

Journal Title: Medical mycology
Year Published: 2022

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