Journal of Fungi (Jul 2022)

Invasive Fungal Diseases in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19 in Israel: A Multicenter Cohort Study

  • Meital Elbaz,
  • Maya Korem,
  • Oshrat Ayalon,
  • Yonit Wiener-Well,
  • Yael Shachor-Meyouhas,
  • Regev Cohen,
  • Jihad Bishara,
  • Alaa Atamna,
  • Tal Brosh-Nissimov,
  • Nir Maaravi,
  • Lior Nesher,
  • Bibiana Chazan,
  • Sharon Reisfeld,
  • Oren Zimhony,
  • Michal Chowers,
  • Yasmin Maor,
  • Eugene Katchman,
  • Ronen Ben-Ami

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof8070721
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. 721

Abstract

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Highly variable estimates of COVID-19-associated fungal diseases (IFDs) have been reported. We aimed to determine the incidence of clinically important fungal diseases in hospitalized COVID-19 patients during the first year of the pandemic. We performed a multicenter survey of IFDs among patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in 13 hospitals in Israel between February 2020 and May 2021. COVID-19-associated pulmonary mold disease (PMD) and invasive candidiasis (IC) were defined using ECMM/ISHAM and EORTC/MSG criteria, respectively. Overall rates of IC and PMD among patients with critical COVID-19 were 10.86 and 10.20 per 1000 admissions, respectively, with significant variability among medical centers. PMD rates were significantly lower in centers where galactomannan was a send-out test versus centers with on-site testing (p = 0.035). The 30-day mortality rate was 67.5% for IC and 57.5% for PMD. Treatment with an echinocandin for IC or an extended-spectrum azole for PMD was associated with significantly lower mortality rates (adjusted hazard ratio [95% confidence interval], 0.26 [0.07–0.91] and 0.23 [0.093–0.57], respectively). In this multicenter national survey, variable rates of PMD were associated with on-site galactomannan testing, suggesting under-detection in sites lacking this capacity. COVID-19-related IFDs were associated with high mortality rates, which were reduced with appropriate antifungal therapy.

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