Invasive aspergillosis in liver transplant recipients in the current era
- PMID: 38801991
- DOI: 10.1016/j.ajt.2024.05.016
Invasive aspergillosis in liver transplant recipients in the current era
Abstract
Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is a rare but fatal disease among liver transplant recipients (LiTRs). We performed a multicenter 1:2 case-control study comparing LiTRs diagnosed with proven/probable IA and controls with no invasive fungal infection. We included 62 IA cases and 124 matched controls. Disseminated infection occurred only in 8 cases (13%). Twelve-week all-cause mortality of IA was 37%. In multivariate analyses, systemic antibiotic usage (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 4.74; P = .03) and history of pneumonia (aOR, 48.7; P = .01) were identified as independent risk factors associated with the occurrence of IA. Moreover, reoperation (aOR, 5.99; P = .01), systemic antibiotic usage (aOR, 5.03; P = .04), and antimold prophylaxis (aOR, 11.9; P = .02) were identified as independent risk factors associated with the occurrence of early IA. Among IA cases, Aspergillus colonization (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 86.9; P < .001), intensive care unit stay (aHR, 3.67; P = .02), disseminated IA (aHR, 8.98; P < .001), and dialysis (aHR, 2.93; P = .001) were identified as independent risk factors associated with 12-week all-cause mortality, while recent receipt of tacrolimus (aHR, 0.11; P = .001) was protective. Mortality among LiTRs with IA remains high in the current era. The identified risk factors and protective factors may be useful for establishing robust targeted antimold prophylactic and appropriate treatment strategies against IA.
Keywords: invasive aspergillosis; liver transplantation; targeted antifungal prophylaxis.
Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors of this manuscript have conflicts of interest to disclose as described by the American Journal of Transplantation. J. Hand reports research grant funding from Pfizer, Janssen, Scynexis, and GlaxoSmithKline. D. Neofytos has received research support from MSD and Pfizer and consulting fees from MSD, Pfizer, Basilea, and Gilead. N.J. Mueller is on the scientific advisory board of Takeda MSD, and Pfizer and has received travel support from Biotest. M. Luong is on the Scientific Advisory Board of Takeda and Merck. S. Husain reports grant funding from Merck, Astellas, ScynexisInc, Pulmocide, Ltd, and Gilead Sciences Inc, outside the submitted work. All other authors have no potential conflicts.
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