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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2002, p. 2207-2212, Vol. 40, No. 6
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.6.2207-2212.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Children's Memorial Hospital, and the Departments of Pediatrics, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois,1 the Fungus Testing Laboratory, Department of Pathology, the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas2
Received 6 September 2001/ Returned for modification 10 October 2001/ Accepted 27 January 2002
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Case report. A 7-week-old boy, weighing 960 g, was transferred to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of Children's Memorial Hospital (CMH), Chicago, Ill., in March 2000 for further management of prematurity and failure to thrive. He was born prematurely at 28 weeks of gestation, weighing 1,050 g, to American parents, who were visiting family in rural Mexico. For the first month of life the infant was managed in a local hospital clinic with minimal neonatal facilities. He was never ventilated, was kept warm by swaddling without the aid of an incubator, and was fed by dropper. At 5 weeks of age and weighing 750 g, he developed necrotizing enterocolitis and was transferred to the NICU of the regional hospital. Enteral feedings were temporarily stopped and he was treated with intravenous dicloxacillin and ceftazidime and given hyperalimentation via a right internal jugular central venous catheter (CVC).
On admission to CMH, the infant was symmetrically growth retarded, with weight, length, and head circumference below the 10th percentile for corrected gestational age. Physical examination revealed a temperature of 36.6°C, respiratory rate of 40/min in room air, heart rate of 134 beats/min, and normal heart sounds with no audible murmurs. Skin sutures were in situ in the right side of the neck at the site of the previous CVC.
Laboratory studies showed the following: hemoglobin, 10.6 g/dl; white blood cell count, 12,800/mm3 (neutrophils, 30%; bands, 3%); platelets, 290,000/mm3; reticulocyte count, 4.2%; and bicarbonate, 16 meq/liter with a normal anion gap. The metabolic acidosis was corrected with sodium bicarbonate. Cranial ultrasound was normal save for a grade I intraventricular hemorrhage. Over the next 2 weeks the infant remained stable and demonstrated steady weight gain.
On the 18th hospital day, hepatomegaly, jaundice, and increased apneic episodes were noted. Laboratory studies revealed the following: hemoglobin, 6.4 g/dl; white blood cell count, 8,700/mm3 (neutrophils, 30%; bands, 3%); and platelets, 22,000/mm3. Red blood cell fragments and burr and target cells were seen on a peripheral blood smear, consistent with a microangiopathic hemolytic anemia. Bilirubin was 7.3 mg/dl (direct, 5.5 mg/dl); aspartate aminotransferase, 320 IU/liter; alanine aminotransferase, 178 IU/liter; gamma glutamyl transferase, 310 IU/liter; albumin, 2.4 g/dl; and prothrombin time, 16.7 s. Blood and urine bacterial and fungal cultures were sterile. The infant received red blood cell and platelet transfusions.
Four days later, on day 22, tachypnea and increasing respiratory distress developed, and auscultation of the heart revealed a gallop rhythm and a II/VI systolic murmur with a midsystolic click. Echocardiography demonstrated a 1.1- by 0.8-cm pedunculated right atrial mass that was adherent to the tricuspid valve and moved in and out of the right ventricle with the cardiac cycle. Doppler ultrasound demonstrated an additional thrombus partially obstructing the superior vena cava. Anticoagulation with low-molecular-weight heparin was started. Although the infant remained hemodynamically stable and afebrile, persistent thrombocytopenia and anemia required daily platelet and frequent red blood cell transfusions.
On the 28th hospital day, gram-variable yeast-like cells were identified in blood cultures, and treatment with intravenous amphotericin B (1 mg/kg of body weight/day) was started. Subsequent subculture on blood and Sabouraud dextrose agars demonstrated the characteristic appearance of a mold, which was identified tentatively on the basis of its morphology as an Acremonium species. Over the next 2 weeks, fungemia persisted (days 30 to 32 and 35 to 42) despite treatment with escalating does of liposomal amphotericin B from 5 to 15 mg/kg/day. Repeat echocardiography demonstrated increased size of the tricuspid vegetation (to 1.8 by 1.2 cm), obstruction of the tricuspid valve, and right-to-left shunting across a patent foramen ovale. Hypotension and respiratory failure necessitated intubation and ventilation, and the infant underwent emergency open-heart surgery to resect the right atrial mass.
Postoperative blood cultures continued to grow fungus (days 43, 45, 46, 48, and 49) and signs of disseminated fungal disease became apparent: Urine culture grew fungus (day 44) and renal and cranial ultrasounds demonstrated multiple echogenic foci in the kidneys and in the distribution of both middle cerebral arteries. Cardiorespiratory failure and metabolic acidosis worsened, and the infant died 9 days after cardiac surgery (7 weeks after admission to CMH). An autopsy was not performed.
Results. The initial sample, a blood culture, demonstrated gram-variable yeast-like cells after 72 h of incubation in broth at 37°C (Bactec; Becton Dickinson, Baltimore, Md.). Subsequent subculture on 5% sheep blood and Sabouraud dextrose agars incubated at 24 to 25°C demonstrated the characteristic appearance of a mold. Initially, on the basis of the yellowish-white colony and the production of long tapering phialides, the isolate was identified tentatively as an Acremonium species.
At surgery, a soft, friable yellow-green mass (measuring 2.0 by 1.5 by 1.0 cm) was removed from the septal and posterior leaflets of the tricuspid valve (Fig. 1A). Histology showed a fibrinous acellular mass that on Gomori methenamine-silver and periodic acid-Schiff staining was composed of masses of branching, slender septate fungal hyphae. The presence of melanin in the cell walls of the hyphae was demonstrated by Fontana-Masson stain (Fig. 1B).
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Discussion. The genus Phialemonium was first described in 1983 by Gams and McGinnis as having morphological features intermediate between fungi of the genera Acremonium, which are hyaline or nonpigmented, and Phialophora, which are pigmented species (4). Phialemonium species are considered by most authorities to be dematiaceous fungi (with melanin in the cell walls and septa of their hyphae) (2). However, the innate hyphal pigmentation is demonstrable in tissue only by histological stains that have specificity for melanin, such as the Fontana-Masson silver stain, which may not be entirely satisfactory in all cases (10, 20). It is suggested that the antioxidant properties of melanin are a virulence factor for the dematiaceous fungi (17).
At present, two Phialemonium species, P. obovatum and P. curvatum, are distinguished on the basis of colony color, conidial morphology, and molecular markers (5). Unlike most of the medically important dematiaceous fungi, which are olive green or brown to grey-black, P. obovatum produces a distinctive pale green pigment in culture. The characteristic conidium-producing cells in Phialemonium species are known as adelophialides, which arise from hyphal cells as a short lateral neck or peg without a basal septum. As the name implies, the conidia of P. obovatum are obovoid, or narrowest at the base (2, 4). In culture, Phialemonium species have the added ability to sporulate within the matrix of the agar medium, without the requirement of an air space above the hyphae (4). This property is also found in the hyaline filamentous molds, such as Fusarium, and the more closely related Acremonium species (6, 17). It is suggested that Fusarium and Acremonium species are more frequently associated with fungemia than angioinvasive fungi, such as Aspergillus and Mucor, because of their ability to produce unicellular yeast-like forms or propagules in vivo that can circulate in the bloodstream more readily than hyphal structures (8, 13, 17). Although this property has not yet been demonstrated for Phialemonium species, budding yeast-like forms of P. obovatum have been observed in vivo (7) and were demonstrated in blood cultures from the present case.
Phialemonium species are saprobes in nature and have been isolated from soil, sewage, air, and water (4). Among dematiaceous fungi, the maximum growth temperature is often used to distinguish potential pathogens from probable contaminants. Dematiaceous species that can grow at 35°C and higher may become invasive and disseminate; those that cannot are usually nonpathogenic or restricted to causing superficial mycoses. Phialemonium species have the ability to grow in culture at temperatures as high as 40°C, indicating not only their pathogenicity but perhaps their potential for infection of the central nervous system as well (2).
There are relatively few documented reports of invasive disease caused by Phialemonium species (Table 1). The first was in a 4.5-month old infant with fatal P. obovatum infection of thermal burn wounds, viable tissue, and blood vessels, with dissemination to the spleen (11). Recent reports have demonstrated the ability of Phialemonium species to cause disease in other immunocompromised hosts and even in the occasional previously healthy patient. For example, Phialemonium species have been reported as a cause of invasive disease in two renal transplant patients: a 5-year-old girl with fungal peritonitis related to a dialysis catheter and a 50-year-old woman with osteomyelitis of the foot (7). P. obovatum osteomyelitis has been observed in a previously healthy 41-year-old man following diskography (10). Fatal P. curvatum and Streptococcus sanguis endocarditis of a porcine bioprosthetic aortic valve in a 63-year-old woman has been described (18). Finally, CVC-related nosocomial P. curvatum fungemia has been observed in a 41-year-old patient with relapsed acute lymphocytic leukemia and in a 37-year-old stem cell transplant recipient from the same hospital (5).
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Neonates are immunocompromised and at high risk for invasive fungal disease, especially if they are premature or have low birth weight. In the NICU setting, neonates undergo an increasing array of invasive diagnostic and therapeutic procedures and are exposed to both broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents and resistant microorganisms. Moreover, advances in neonatology have led to greater numbers of premature infants surviving, and these infants are then susceptible to infection with emerging opportunistic pathogens. Phialemonium species should be added to the list of potential causes of fungal infections in this population.
Recognition and identification of Phialemonium species present a significant challenge for the clinician and microbiologist alike. Similarly, the presence of different morphological forms of fungi in unusual anatomic sites and the apparent absence of melanin pigmentation make its identification in tissue problematic. Thus, it is conceivable that without special histological stains or the help of a fungal reference laboratory, many clinical isolates of Phialemonium species may either be misidentified as hyaline filamentous fungi, such as Acremonium species, or be misdiagnosed as laboratory contaminants.
In the absence of definitive identification of an unusual fungus, the choice of optimal antifungal therapy remains difficult. Furthermore, because Phialemonium species are rare clinical isolates, there are no definitive data upon which to base recommendations for optimal treatment. The limited results of fungal susceptibility testing, where they exist, suggest that P. obovatum is resistant to both amphotericin B and itraconazole, while the susceptibility results for P. curvatum for itraconazole and ketoconazole appear somewhat contradictory (Table 2). Finally, results of in vitro fungal susceptibility tests do not always correlate with in vivo antifungal activity.
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Previous experience suggests that reports of rare fungal infections among selected patient subgroups and animals are proven predictors of potential emerging pathogens and the harbinger of future infection in a wider patient population (17). The recent increase in reports of infections with Phialemonium species and continued expansion of the number of immunocompromised patients suggests that infection with these unfamiliar fungal pathogens is likely to become more widespread. The lack of uniform susceptibility of Phialemonium species to amphotericin B and itraconazole, the usual antifungal agents of choice for phaeohyphomycoses, is of concern (19). More extensive susceptibility testing of clinical Phialemonium isolates with conventional and newer antifungal agents (and perhaps synergy studies) is required to identify the best therapeutic regimen. The present case emphasizes the inherent difficulty of managing infections caused by unusual or unfamiliar fungal pathogens and the importance of timely referral to reference laboratories for formal identification and standardized susceptibility testing.
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