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. 2011 Sep 1:1:37.
doi: 10.1186/2110-5820-1-37.

Diagnosis of invasive candidiasis in the ICU

Affiliations

Diagnosis of invasive candidiasis in the ICU

Philippe Eggimann et al. Ann Intensive Care. .

Abstract

Invasive candidiasis ranges from 5 to 10 cases per 1,000 ICU admissions and represents 5% to 10% of all ICU-acquired infections, with an overall mortality comparable to that of severe sepsis/septic shock. A large majority of them are due to Candida albicans, but the proportion of strains with decreased sensitivity or resistance to fluconazole is increasingly reported. A high proportion of ICU patients become colonized, but only 5% to 30% of them develop an invasive infection. Progressive colonization and major abdominal surgery are common risk factors, but invasive candidiasis is difficult to predict and early diagnosis remains a major challenge. Indeed, blood cultures are positive in a minority of cases and often late in the course of infection. New nonculture-based laboratory techniques may contribute to early diagnosis and management of invasive candidiasis. Both serologic (mannan, antimannan, and betaglucan) and molecular (Candida-specific PCR in blood and serum) have been applied as serial screening procedures in high-risk patients. However, although reasonably sensitive and specific, these techniques are largely investigational and their clinical usefulness remains to be established. Identification of patients susceptible to benefit from empirical antifungal treatment remains challenging, but it is mandatory to avoid antifungal overuse in critically ill patients. Growing evidence suggests that monitoring the dynamic of Candida colonization in surgical patients and prediction rules based on combined risk factors may be used to identify ICU patients at high risk of invasive candidiasis susceptible to benefit from prophylaxis or preemptive antifungal treatment.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Pathophysiology of invasive candidiasis.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Concept of antifungal treatments in critically ill patients.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Practical approach of patient at risk of invasive candidiasis. Suggested algorithm to be applied in patients at risk of invasive candidiasis after having check that they are among those susceptible to benefit from prophylaxis (see Table 3) or evaluated to be at a risk level too low to justify antifungal prophylaxis, such as early after extended abdominal surgery or secondary peritonitis.

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