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Candidemia in the elderly: What does it change?
by
Barchiesi, Francesco
, Nitti, Cinzia
, Manso, Esther
, Salvi, Aldo
, Trave, Francesca
, Mazzanti, Sara
, Orsetti, Elena
in
Adults
/ Age
/ Aged
/ Aging
/ Amphotericin B
/ Antifungal agents
/ Antifungal Agents - therapeutic use
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Candidemia
/ Candidemia - blood
/ Candidemia - drug therapy
/ Candidemia - epidemiology
/ Candidiasis
/ Cardiovascular diseases
/ Caspofungin
/ Comorbidity
/ Death
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Dialysis
/ Drug dosages
/ Elderly
/ Epidemiology
/ Failure
/ Female
/ Fluconazole
/ Fungi
/ Fungicides
/ Geriatrics
/ Health aspects
/ Health services
/ Heart diseases
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Kidneys
/ Lung diseases
/ Male
/ Medical prognosis
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ Minimum inhibitory concentration
/ Mortality
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Older people
/ Patients
/ People and Places
/ Renal failure
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Sepsis
/ Septic shock
/ Studies
/ Surveillance
/ Survival Analysis
/ Treatment Outcome
2017
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Candidemia in the elderly: What does it change?
by
Barchiesi, Francesco
, Nitti, Cinzia
, Manso, Esther
, Salvi, Aldo
, Trave, Francesca
, Mazzanti, Sara
, Orsetti, Elena
in
Adults
/ Age
/ Aged
/ Aging
/ Amphotericin B
/ Antifungal agents
/ Antifungal Agents - therapeutic use
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Candidemia
/ Candidemia - blood
/ Candidemia - drug therapy
/ Candidemia - epidemiology
/ Candidiasis
/ Cardiovascular diseases
/ Caspofungin
/ Comorbidity
/ Death
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Dialysis
/ Drug dosages
/ Elderly
/ Epidemiology
/ Failure
/ Female
/ Fluconazole
/ Fungi
/ Fungicides
/ Geriatrics
/ Health aspects
/ Health services
/ Heart diseases
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Kidneys
/ Lung diseases
/ Male
/ Medical prognosis
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ Minimum inhibitory concentration
/ Mortality
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Older people
/ Patients
/ People and Places
/ Renal failure
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Sepsis
/ Septic shock
/ Studies
/ Surveillance
/ Survival Analysis
/ Treatment Outcome
2017
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Candidemia in the elderly: What does it change?
by
Barchiesi, Francesco
, Nitti, Cinzia
, Manso, Esther
, Salvi, Aldo
, Trave, Francesca
, Mazzanti, Sara
, Orsetti, Elena
in
Adults
/ Age
/ Aged
/ Aging
/ Amphotericin B
/ Antifungal agents
/ Antifungal Agents - therapeutic use
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Candidemia
/ Candidemia - blood
/ Candidemia - drug therapy
/ Candidemia - epidemiology
/ Candidiasis
/ Cardiovascular diseases
/ Caspofungin
/ Comorbidity
/ Death
/ Demographics
/ Demography
/ Diabetes mellitus
/ Dialysis
/ Drug dosages
/ Elderly
/ Epidemiology
/ Failure
/ Female
/ Fluconazole
/ Fungi
/ Fungicides
/ Geriatrics
/ Health aspects
/ Health services
/ Heart diseases
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Kidneys
/ Lung diseases
/ Male
/ Medical prognosis
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ Minimum inhibitory concentration
/ Mortality
/ Multivariate analysis
/ Older people
/ Patients
/ People and Places
/ Renal failure
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Sepsis
/ Septic shock
/ Studies
/ Surveillance
/ Survival Analysis
/ Treatment Outcome
2017
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Journal Article
Candidemia in the elderly: What does it change?
2017
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Overview
Candidemia is a life-threatening fungal infection and it can affect patients of all ages. Characterization of candidemia in the elderly is lacking.
We performed a retrospective study of adults (≥ 18 years) with candidemia diagnosed in our center in 2010-2015. Demographics, comorbidities, clinical and microbiologic characteristics, antifungal treatment and outcome were compared between older (≤65 years) and younger (>65 years) patients.
Among 302 patients with candidemia identified during the study period, 188 (62%) belonged to the elderly group. Comorbidities were significantly more frequent in older patients and included chronic pulmonary diseases, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes mellitus, and chronic renal failure (p ranging from <0.0001 to 0.017). A significantly higher proportion of older patients had septic shock (p = 0.040) at the time of candidemia. Candida albicans accounted for 53% of isolates and there were no significant differences between patients' age and Candida species. Thirty-day mortality was significantly higher in older (45%) than in younger (28%) patients (p = 0.003). Factors associated with a significant higher proportion of death in the elderly included older age (i.e.: old-old), being hospitalized in ICU rather than in other wards, suffering from chronic pulmonary diseases, the presence of septic shock, multiple organ failure, dialysis and being infected with C. glabrata (p ranging from <0.0001 to 0.034). On multivariate analysis septic shock (HR 1.744 [CI95% 1.049-2.898], p = 0.032) and multiple organ failure (HR 2.242 [CI95% 1.070-4.698], p = 0.032) were independently associated with a higher risk of death. The probability of 30-days survival of older patients was significantly reduced when compared to that of younger patients (p = 0.005) who did not receive any treatment. In the elderly, there was a trend toward higher MICs for fluconazole/C. albicans, fluconazole/C. glabrata, amphotericin B/C. albicans, and caspofungin/C. glabrata.
In our study, we found that elderly patients with Candida bloodstream infections are characterized by a high mortality rate. In particular, the lack of any antifungal therapy as well as the occurrence of septic shock increased significantly the overall mortality. Additionally, we found that there was a trend of higher MIC for specific drug/Candida combination.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
/ Age
/ Aged
/ Aging
/ Antifungal Agents - therapeutic use
/ Death
/ Dialysis
/ Elderly
/ Failure
/ Female
/ Fungi
/ Humans
/ Kidneys
/ Male
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Minimum inhibitory concentration
/ Patients
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Sepsis
/ Studies
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