Current Medical Mycology (Jun 2022)

Cutaneous cryptococcal infection: Initial manifestation of acquired T-cell immunodeficiency due to malignant thymoma

  • Timothy McCann,
  • Anar Patel,
  • Neha Patel,
  • Deepali Sharath,
  • Borna Mansouri,
  • Cynthia Contreras

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18502/cmm.8.2.10334
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
pp. 55 – 58

Abstract

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Background and Purpose: Cryptococcosis is a known opportunistic infection. Thymomas are known to cause immune dysregulation. We describe an atypical case of cutaneous cryptococcosis in a patient with acquired T cell immunodeficiency that has been found to be secondary to a type B3 thymoma with progression to carcinoma.Case report: A 63-year-old male presented with a chronic skin lesion confirmed as Cryptococcus neoformans on biopsy and an incidental mediastinal mass found during infectious work-up for the notable cluster of differentiation 4 (CD4)+ lymphopenia. This led to the diagnosis of a type B3 thymoma requiring resection. The cryptococcal lesion was treated successfully with azole therapy.Conclusion: C. neoformans is an opportunistic infection rarely associated with isolated T cell immunodeficiency due to thymomas. A multidisciplinary approach and understanding of the pathogenicity of cryptococcus and the immunological effect of thymic dysfunction are paramount to diagnosis and treatment.

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