Journal of Fungi (Sep 2024)

Central Nervous System Fungal Diseases in Children with Malignancies: A 16-Year Study from the Infection Working Group of the Hellenic Society of Pediatric Hematology Oncology

  • Loizos Petrikkos,
  • Maria Kourti,
  • Kondylia Antoniadi,
  • Tatiana-Sultana Tziola,
  • Angeliki-Eleni Sfetsiori,
  • Vasiliki Antari,
  • Sofia Savoukidou,
  • Georgia Avgerinou,
  • Maria Filippidou,
  • Eugenia Papakonstantinou,
  • Sophia Polychronopoulou,
  • Emmanuel Hatzipantelis,
  • Dimitrios Doganis,
  • Antonios Kattamis,
  • Vassilios Papadakis,
  • Emmanuel Roilides,
  • Athanasios Tragiannidis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof10090654
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 654

Abstract

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We analyzed data on pediatric invasive fungal diseases of the central nervous system (CNS-IFDs) reported by five of a total of eight Pediatric Hematology-Oncology Departments in Greece for 16 years (2007–2022). A total of twelve patients (11 boys, median age: 9.5 years, range: 2–16) were reported suffering from CNS-IFDs. The underlying malignancy was acute lymphoblastic leukemia in 9/12 and acute myeloid leukemia, Ewing sarcoma, and rhabdomyosarcoma in one each. Eleven patients presented with CNS-related symptoms (i.e., seizures, headache, cerebral palsy, ataxia, hallucination, seizures, blurred vision, amaurosis). All patients had pathological MRI findings. Multifocal fungal disease was observed in 6/12 patients. Nine proven and three probable CNS-IFD cases were diagnosed. Causative pathogens in proven cases were Aspergillus spp. and Candida albicans (n = 2 each), Mucor spp., Rhizopus arrhizus, Absidia spp., Fusarium oxysporum and Cryptococcus neoformans (n = 1 each). Causative pathogens in probable cases were Aspergillus spp. (n = 2) and Candida spp. (n = 1). All patients received appropriate antifungal therapy (median duration: 69.5 days, range 19–364). Two patients underwent additional surgical treatment. Six patients were admitted to the Intensive Care Unit due to complications. Three patients (25%) died, two due to IFD and one due to an underlying disease. Early recognition and prompt intervention of CNS-IFDs may rescue the patients and improve overall survival.

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