F. Rossetti et al., FUNGAL LIVER INFECTION IN MARROW TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS - PREVALENCE AT AUTOPSY, PREDISPOSING FACTORS, AND CLINICAL-FEATURES, Clinical infectious diseases, 20(4), 1995, pp. 801-811
To determine the prevalence of fungal liver infection at autopsy in ma
rrow transplant recipients, we reviewed autopsy results for the period
1980-1989. Cases were compared to randomly chosen autopsied controls
without fungal infection. Fungal liver infection was found in 67 (9%)
of 731 patients. Fungal cultures of liver lesions were positive for 34
of 67 patients, most of whom had been culture-positive for the same f
ungal species (largely Candida) during life. Multivariate analysis rev
ealed that independent predictors of fungal liver infection were deep
fungal infection after transplantation (RR, 35), colonization or super
ficial infection after transplantation (RR, 13), and severe liver dysf
unction caused by veno-occlusive disease of the liver and/or graft-ver
sus-host disease (RR, 7). Clinical and laboratory findings during the
last month of life revealed no differences between cases and controls,
Liver imaging studies performed during the last 15 days of life had a
sensitivity of only 18% for detecting fungal liver lesions.