Journal of Fungi (Mar 2023)

Pediatric Tinea Capitis: A Retrospective Cohort Study from 2010 to 2021

  • Joel Dascalu,
  • Hiba Zaaroura,
  • Yael Renert-Yuval,
  • Ziyad Khamaysi,
  • Emily Avitan-Hersh,
  • Rivka Friedland

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof9030366
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. 366

Abstract

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Pediatric tinea capitis displays a wide range of prevalence, with significant variability among populations. We retrospectively extracted the medical records of 456 pediatric patients diagnosed with tinea capitis during the years 2010–2021, from the dermatology outpatient clinics in two tertiary medical centers. Three species were isolated in 90% of patients: T. tonsurans, M. canis, and T. violaceum. While T. tonsurans presented a six-fold increase in incidence during the years 2019–2021, M. canis maintained stable incidence rates. Furthermore, terbinafine was the most efficient antifungal agent against T. tonsurans, achieving complete clinical clearance in 95% of patients, as compared to fluconazole (68%) and griseofulvin (38%) (p M. canis, griseofulvin and fluconazole were equally efficient (73% and 66%, respectively) (p = 0.44). Kerion was described in 36% and 14% of patients with T. tonsurans and M. canis, respectively, (p T. tonsurans, establishing this pathogen as the most common cause for tinea capitis in our population. Our data suggest that terbinafine is effective and presents high cure rates for tinea capitis in the pediatric population.

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