Clinical Trials of Antifungal Prophylaxis among Patients Undergoing Surgery
Open Access
- 15 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Clinical Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 39 (Supplement) , S185-S192
- https://doi.org/10.1086/421955
Abstract
Invasive mycoses have emerged as a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Epidemiological studies have shown that surgery services have the highest rate of Candida infections in the hospital. In addition to classical risk factors, heavy Candida colonization, recurrent gastrointestinal perforations, and acute pancreatitis are frequently associated with invasive candidiasis. Because prompt initiation of antifungal therapy is critical for cure but difficult to accomplish, prevention of fungal infections may play an important role in this clinical setting; however, few prophylactic or preemptive studies have been done to date. The choice, route of administration, and dose of the antifungal and comparator regimens and the use of clinically relevant and robust study end points are critical for the trial design. Various criteria have been used to identify patients at risk of candidiasis: surgical condition, presence of multiple risk factors, colonization indexes, or expected length of stay in the intensive care unit. Some are not selective enough, and others are time consuming and expensive. Rigorous selection of high-risk patients is crucial to optimize the risk-benefit ratio of preventive antifungal strategies. The aim is to maximize chances of reducing morbidity and mortality while minimizing treatment costs, exposure of low-risk patients to adverse events, and emergence of resistant fungal strains.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Epidemiology of Candidemia in Swiss Tertiary Care Hospitals: Secular Trends, 1991–2000Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2004
- Nosocomial Bloodstream Infections in United States Hospitals: A Three‐Year AnalysisClinical Infectious Diseases, 1999
- The Impact of Candidemia on Length of Hospital Stay, Outcome, and Overall Cost of IllnessClinical Infectious Diseases, 1998
- Microbiological Factors Influencing the Outcome of Nosocomial Bloodstream Infections: A 6‐Year Validated, Population‐Based ModelClinical Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Opportunistic Candidiasis: An Epidemic of the 1980sClinical Infectious Diseases, 1995
- Nosocomial Candidemia: Risk Factors and Attributable MortalityClinical Infectious Diseases, 1995
- Secular Trends in the Epidemiology of Nosocomial Fungal Infections in the United States, 1980-1990The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1993
- Candidemia in a Tertiary Care Hospital: Epidemiology, Risk Factors, and Predictors of MortalityClinical Infectious Diseases, 1992
- Secular trends in nosocomial primary bloodstream infections in the United States, 1980–1989The American Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Hospital-Acquired CandidemiaArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1988