Background. Fungal infections (FI) after solid organ transplantation (Tx) remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Aspergillus and Candida account for more than 80% of FI.
Methods. One thousand nine hundred and sixty-three patients undergoing thoracic organ Tx [1,852 heart and 111 lung (35 heart-lung Tx, 30 double-lung Tx, 46 single-lung Tx)] in 12 Italian Centers between November 1985 and January 1997 were included in the study.
Results. Fifty-one patients (41 heart Tx - 2.2%; 9 heart-lung Tx - 25.7%; 1 single-lung Tx - 2.2%) developed 53 invasive FI at a median of 58 days (range 6-2479) after Tx. Aspergillosis was the most frequent FI in our series accounting for 64.1% (34/53) of all FI [A fumigatus, n=29 (85.3%);A nidulans, n=2 (5.9%);A niger, n=2 (5.9%);A terreus, n=1 (2.9%)]; 30 (88.2%) patients developed invasive lung aspergillosis, 2 (5.9%) a tracheobronchitis, 1 (2.9%) a skin infection, and 1 (2.9%) a sternal wound infection. Twelve patients (22.6%) developed candidiasis [C albicans, n=8 (66.6%);C krusei, n=1 (8.3%);C glabrata, n=1 (8.3%);C parapsilosis, n=1 (8.3%);C sake, n=1 (8.3%)]. There were seven episodes (58.3%) of candidemia, two (16.7%) esophagitis, two (16.7%) gastritis, and one (8.3%) tracheobronchitis. Mortality was 29.4% for patients developing aspergillosis and 33.3% for those experiencing candidiasis. Furthermore, four patients developed the following: one C neoformans meningitis, one Sporothrix cyanescens pneumonia, one Rhizopus spp. tracheobronchitis, and one Trichosporon beigelii disseminated infection. Three additional patients were diagnosed affected by deep mould infection by histology alone.
Conclusions. Deep-seated FI were relatively rare in our series, although their mortality rate is still very high.