Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment · Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and...

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10/2/2018 1 Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment George R. Thompson III, MD Associate Professor Division of Infectious Diseases Department of Internal Medicine Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology University of California-Davis Medical Center Key Questions Expanding geographic range New locations or simply newly recognized? 10% diagnosed outside of normal range Taxonomy updates and new species New diagnostic methods Development of rapid diagnostics, kinetics of serology Prolonged treatment unique toxicities? New azoles and new formulations

Transcript of Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment · Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and...

Page 1: Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment · Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment George R. Thompson III, MD Associate Professor Division of Infectious

10/2/2018

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Endemic Mycoses: Update

on Diagnostics and

Treatment

George R. Thompson III, MD

Associate Professor

Division of Infectious Diseases

Department of Internal Medicine

Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology

University of California-Davis Medical Center

Key Questions

▪ Expanding geographic range

New locations or simply newly recognized?

10% diagnosed outside of normal range

▪ Taxonomy updates and new species

▪ New diagnostic methods

Development of rapid diagnostics, kinetics of serology

▪ Prolonged treatment – unique toxicities?

New azoles and new formulations

Page 2: Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment · Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment George R. Thompson III, MD Associate Professor Division of Infectious

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Endemic Mycoses

Dimorphic fungal infections Location

• Histoplasmosis Scattered worldwide

• Blastomycosis Scattered worldwide

• Coccidioidomycosis US/Latin America

• Paracoccidioidomycosis Latin America

• Talaromycosis Northern Thailand/China

• Sporotrichosis Worldwide

• Emergomycosis/Emmonsia Scattered

Case 1: 45 y/o with recurrent

pneumonia presents for second

opinion

• 45 y/o African American male with

no prior history

• Presents with severe cough and

chest pain.

• Works as long-haul truck driver.

Recent project in Bakersfield, CA.

• No headache or MSK complaints

• Exam reveals: tired appearing,

course breath sounds, no skin

lesions.

What is likely diagnosis? Appropriate workup?

Page 3: Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment · Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment George R. Thompson III, MD Associate Professor Division of Infectious

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Origin of Coccidioides spp?

▪ Geographic expansion

requires further analysis of

population structure and

evolutionary history

▪ Phylogenetics and

population genomics (86

isolates)

▪ Additional ~200 added

▪ C. posadasii is the more

ancient of the two spp

▪ Arizona-N. Mexico origin

for C. posadasii

Engelthaler DM, et al. Mbio. 2016 Apr 26;7(2):e00550-16.

Most recent

common ancestor

~ 5 million years

agoAZ

pocket

mouse

Kangaroo

Rat

Affects approximately 150,000 yearly▪ ½ to 1/3 are subclinical

▪ Almost universal protection

from reinfection

Cause of CAP in 17-29%

of patients in endemic

areas!

Definite seasonal increase in early fall

Epidemiology

Cooksey GS. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2017 Aug 11;66(31):833-34.

Brown J, et al. Clin Epidemiol. 2013 Jun 25;5:185-97.

Continual

increase

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Diagnostics

Culture/Histology▪ Culture: definitive, laboratory hazard ▪ Histopath dx: characteristic forms in tissue

Serological diagnosis▪ ID/CF: used to establish diagnosis

▪ May be negative early or immunocompromised

▪ Dissem. infection: IDCF titers 1:16▪ + CSF ab: meningeal infection▪ Impact of early fluconazole in reducing

development of CF ab▪ EIA: ↑sensitivity, potential false +; cross react w/

other endemic fungi▪ Lateral Flow assay

Alternative methods: investigational▪ Antigen testing: varies widely -timing and host/site▪ PCR (limited sensitivity) – no different than Cx▪ Skin test: new test (Spherusol) decreased

sensitivity compared to prior (Spherulin)

Thompson GR et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2011;53:e20-4; Thompson GR, et al. J Clin Micro. 2012; 50(9):3060-2

Thompson GR, et al. Chest. 2012; 143(3):776-81.

Arthroconidia

Rupturing spherule and

empty spherule

ID50 ~1

arthroconidia!

Mchardy I, Thompson GR. J Clin Micro. 2018 In press

Diagnostics

Antigen

and

PCR

or

culture

Later IgG spike

in minority of

patients:

1) reinfection?

2) ruptured

granuloma

3) Kinetics not

consistent

with false (+)

Page 5: Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment · Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment George R. Thompson III, MD Associate Professor Division of Infectious

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Mchardy I, Thompson GR. J Clin Micro. In press

Diagnostics

Serofast*

▪ Significant differences

in serology kinetics

▪ Closely correlate with

symptomatic

improvement –

(symptom scores not

shown)

▪ Minority of patients

are serofast even

years laterCohort of 500+ patients with 4 distinct forms of

disease followed over 5 years

Low-dose CT screening for current and former smokers (ages 55-80)

No guidance for those in endemic regions

Peripheral pulmonary infiltrates and lesions

▪ Coccidioides

▪ Blastomyces

▪ Histoplasma

▪ Cryptococcus

✓ PET scan not always reliable

✓ Bronchoscopy 65-88% sens✓ Peripheral<2cm lesions ~34%

✓ Transthoracic biopsy for <6mm nodules: ✓ Non-diagnostic ~15%

Sequalae: Peripheral nodules

Electromagnetic

Navigational

Bronchscopy

Page 6: Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment · Endemic Mycoses: Update on Diagnostics and Treatment George R. Thompson III, MD Associate Professor Division of Infectious

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Electromagnetic Navigational Bronchoscopy

Case 2: 65 y/o male with hand

lesions after fall

• 65 y/o male painter fell off ladder

while painting state capital

building.

• Fell onto bush and had puncture

to dorsum of hand.

• Exam with purulent drainage, no

warmth, and no

lymphadenopathy.

• Cultures return after ~10 days.

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Sporotrichosis

• S. brasiliensis (cat), S. schenckii (plant),

S. globosa, S. luriei, S. mexicana

• Prevalence ~0.1-0.5%

• Cutaneous disease, spread via lymphatics.

• Pulmonary or disseminated in

immunosuppressed

• Shift of environmental to zoonotic disease

– Outbreak in South America

– Human = feline cases (claws+ in 29%!)

• Human cases

– Adults: extremity

– Children: face/neck

• Facial lesions secondary to high-inoculum

occupational factors

Rodrigues AM, et al. PLoS Pathog. 2016 Jul:12(7):e1005638

Lyon GM, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2003;36:34-9. Zhang Y, et al. Persoonia 2015;35:1-20

▪ S. brasiliensis exhibits increased virulence

▪ Outbreak and expansion over last 2 decades

▪ Preliminary evidence AMB (>1 µg/mL) and ITZ (>2)

MICs are increasing (shift of MIC90 from 2 → 4); TBF

MICs remains low (0.1)

Gremiao ID, et al. PLoS Pathog. 2017;13:e1006077 Borba-Santos et al. Med Mycol 2015;

53(2):178-188. Rodrigues AM, BMC Infect Dis. 2014;14:219

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What almost was….

▪ Sporothrix spp vs

Ophiostoma proposed

taxonomic changes

▪ Cause of Dutch Elm

disease

De Beer ZW, et al. Stud Mycol. 2016;83:165-191. Lopes-Bezerra LM, et al. Med Mycol. 2018;56:S126-143

Bark Beetle

Diagnostics

Culture/Histology▪ Culture: definitive (4-20 days), rosettes▪ Histopath dx: “asteroid” bodies (5-13 µm)

Serological diagnosis▪ Immunodiffusion and western blot▪ Latex agglutination – useful in Sporothrix

meningitis?▪ ELISA (cell wall antigen)

▪ ScCBF-ELISA – Sens: 90%, useful as response to therapy with decreasing titers over time

▪ AUC ROC= 0.9154

Alternative methods:▪ PCR in tissue (none commercially available) ▪ Skin test: sporotrichin (not commercially

available)

Kusuhara M, et al. Mycopathologia. 1988 102(2):129-33. Barros MB, et al. Clin Micro Rev 2011; 23(4):633-54.

Bernardes-Engemann AR et al. Med Mycol 2005;43(6):487 Bernardes-Engemann, et al. Med Mycol 2015;53(1):28

“Asteroid” body in tissue

not specific

Rosettes at tips of

conidiophores

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Sporotrichosis: Treatment

• Severe disease/dissemination: Ampho B

• Cutaneous: SSKI, itraconazole, new azoles?

• Long durations of therapy common despite debridement/drainage

Day 0 Day 62 Day 152 Day 247

Itraconazole 200mg orally twice daily

Day 467

Case 3: South American man with

chronic cough, weight loss.

• 65 y/o man from Peru

• 3 month history of 20 pound weight loss,

fatigue, cough

• Examination: chronically ill man with

wasting

• Chest radiograph: bilateral granulomatous

disease

Evaluation at this point?

Likely diagnosis?

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Paracoccidioidomycosis

Paracoccidioides brasiliensis (dimorphic fungus)

• Most common systemic mycosis in Latin

America

• Tissue phase: “pilot wheel”

• New spp proposals:

• P. lutzii, P. americana, P. restrepiensis,

• P. venezuelensis

• Clinical Presentation & Diagnosis

– Granulomatous disease: pulm and disseminated infection

• Diagnosis

– Double immunodiffusion (gold standard)

– ELISA: More sens, less spec

– CF: More spec, less sens

– Antigen detection: useful in highly immunocompromised

Marques da Silva SH, et al. J Clin Micro 2004 42(6):2419-24. de Camargo ZP. Mycopathologia. 2008 165(4-5):289-302.

Perenha-Viana MCZ, et al. Clin Vaccine Immunol. 2012 19(4):616-619.

Case 4: Forester returning

home from Thailand

• A 52 yo man, with no prior medical

history, returned home with extensive

pedunculated skin lesion over his face

and trunk, some of which had become

ulcerated

• His history was significant for extensive

world-wide travel in course of his work as

a forester

• During the last trip he tripped and fell,

injuring forehead in a bamboo thicket.

Likely diagnoses? Case Courtesy of Dr. Tom Patterson. Thanks!

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Talaromycosis (formerly

Penicilliosis)

Talaromyces marneffei

• Produces red pigment in culture media; may

be a laboratory hazard

• Associated with bamboo rats

• Patients with AIDS: Thailand/Southern China,

Vietnam, NE India, Hong Kong

Clinical Presentation & Diagnosis

• Chronic granulomatous infection: fever,

weight loss

Diagnosis

• Cultures (~14 days): red diffusible pigment

• Blood culture (+): ~76%

• Bone Marrow (+): ~100%

• Non-invasive: • GM cross reactivity (73-80%)

• Antigen testing: Sens-75-100%; Spec 83-100%

Le T, et al. NEJM 2017;376:2329-2340. Prakit, et al. Euro J Clin Micro 2016

Characteristic

transverse septum

Treatment

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Treatment: Toxicity (Fluconazole)

▪ Fluconazole toxicity?

▪ Alopecia, cheilitis, dry skin

▪ Generally well tolerated, even at doses > 800

mg/day; for many life-long therapy

▪ Eval of >300 patients on fluconazole for > 30

days: 50% discontinued secondary to toxicity

▪ Change to itra/posa/or stop – ~14-21 days to

resolution of skin toxicity, ~90 days to resolution

of alopecia

P=0.007 P<0.001

Thompson GR 3rd, et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. Pending revisions

Davis M, Nguyen V…Thompson GR, et al. Pending submission

Treatment: Toxicity (Posaconazole and

Itraconazole)

▪ Tablet formulation has improved

serum [conc] (median of 0.74 →

1.92 μg/mL)

▪ 10% with levels > 3.5 μg/mL

▪ Ceiling for toxicity?

11β-HSD1, 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase

type 1 and type 2

Recognition of 7 patients:

Hypertension, hypokalemia, alkalosis

All had posa level >4 μg/mLUndetectable renin and aldo

Elevated 11-deoxycortisol, and cortisol/cortisone ratio

Mean posa 5.62 (range 3-9.5 µg/mL)

Jung DS, et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2014 58(11): 6993–6995.

Thompson et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2017 25;61(8) Odermatt, Thompson. Pending submission

11β-OH?

Proven Inhibition

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Treatment: Toxicity (Posaconazole and

Itraconazole)

Human CYP11B1(29 March 2018)

-9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4-20

0

20

40

60

80

100Fluconazole

Voriconazole

Hydroxy-Itraconazole

Posaconazole

Itraconazole

Isavuconazole

log M

Treatment: Toxicity (Voriconazole)

▪ CNS and peripheral neuropathy

▪ Hepatotoxicity

▪ Photopsia

▪ Bipolar On-Cells

▪ Photosensitivity

▪ N-oxide metabolite

Long term use:

▪ Cutaneous malignancy

▪ Fluoride toxicity

Lat A, Thompson GR 3rd. Infect Drug Resist. 2011;4:43-53.

Thompson GR 3rd, et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2012 Jan;56(1):563-4.

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Conclusions

Update in Endemic Mycoses:

✓Evolutionary biology

✓Epidemiology and endemicity

✓Taxonomic changes!!

✓New Diagnostics are under active evaluation

✓Toxicity of current agents – new agents are on the

way!

▪ Unanswered questionsGenomics, new diagnostic modalities, performance characteristics,

best agent(s)? Combination therapy, drug repurposing, New

Toxicities?