Renal transplant patient survives a donor-derived abdominal invasive mucormycosis (Lichtheimia ramosa)

Publication date

2020-12

Authors

Spithoven, E M
Bruns, AnkeISNI 0000000395587782
Petri, Bart-Jeroen
Haas, Pieter Jan AORCID 0000-0002-1127-095X
Nguyen, Tri QISNI 0000000394141746
Hagen, FerryORCID 0000-0002-5622-1916
van Zuilen, Arjan D.ORCID 0000-0002-2561-5533ISNI 000000039480153X

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Abstract

Mucormycosis is a life-threatening invasive fungal infection, most commonly described in severely immunocompromised patients. It is characterized by rapid invasive growth of the fungus and often with fatal outcome. We report a case of a renal transplant recipient diagnosed with a donor-derived invasive mucormycosis. In this patient, we used a step-wise approach of withdrawal of immunosuppressants, antifungal induction therapy, extensive surgical debridement of all (potentially) infected tissue, abdominal irrigation of liposomal amphotericin B and interferon gamma. Due to rapid diagnosis and intensive therapy the patient survived.

Keywords

Interferon gamma, mucormycosis, Renal transplant, Survival, Infectious Diseases, Microbiology, Case Reports

Citation

Spithoven, E M, Bruns, A H W, Petri, B J, Haas, P J, Nguyen, T Q, Hagen, F & van Zuilen, A D 2020, 'Renal transplant patient survives a donor-derived abdominal invasive mucormycosis (Lichtheimia ramosa)', Medical Mycology Case Reports, vol. 30, pp. 39-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mmcr.2020.10.002