American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports (Jun 2022)

Chronic invasive fungal sinusitis with orbital and olfactory cleft involvement secondary to indolent mucormycosis

  • Aaron R. Kaufman,
  • Alex B. Labby,
  • Chau Pham,
  • Gursant S. Atwal,
  • Tatiana K. Dixon,
  • Burce Ozgen,
  • Victoria S. Lee

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. 101448

Abstract

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Purpose: Chronic invasive fungal sinusitis secondary to indolent mucormycosis is a rare clinical entity, and the ideal management is controversial. A case of indolent mucormycosis successfully managed with conservative debridement and retrobulbar amphotericin B is herein reported. Observations: A 42-year-old man with diabetes mellitus and kidney transplant presented with chronic invasive fungal sinusitis with left orbital involvement from indolent mucormycosis. The patient was treated with aggressive systemic antifungal therapy, left retrobulbar injection of liposomal amphotericin B, reduction in immunosuppression, and conservative surgical debridement. Although the left olfactory cleft was involved, the cribriform plate was not resected due to risk of seeding the intracranial space. Given mild orbital involvement, no orbital debridement was performed and the patient had resolution of his orbital findings with systemic and retrobulbar amphotericin B. The patient had clinical and radiographic stability at 6-month follow-up. Conclusions: Conservative resection with subsequent long-term antifungal treatment can be a successful regimen in indolent mucormycosis. Retrobulbar amphotericin B may be a prudent orbit-sparing adjuvant therapy in indolent mucormycosis.

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