Publication: Treatment of invasive fungal infections in haematology-oncology patients
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Advisor
Publication Date
2019
Language
Turkish
Type
Review
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Immunocompromised patients, those with cancer or haematological malignancies and allogeneic bone marrow/haematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients carry a high risk of invasive fungal infection (IFI), which is frequently life threatening. the most common causes of IFIs are aspergillus and Candida species. Patients who receive long-term corticosteroids or broad-spectrum antimicrobial treatment or total parenteral nutrition; patients with central venous catheters, neutropenia, malignancies, or burns and low-weight premature infants are at highest risk of IFI. Early start of antifungal therapy is mandatory, but clinical findings often do not provide clear evidence of IFI. antifungal agents preferentially used for systemic therapy of IFIs are amphotericin B preparations, fluconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole, caspofungin, Anidulafungin, micafungin, and isavuconazole. Local epidemiological data, current resistance profile against antifungal agents, and their pharmacological and economic aspects together with clinical experience must be considered for clinical management of patients with IFI.
Description
Source:
Klimik Journal
Publisher:
aves
Keywords:
Subject
Medicine, Internal medicine, Microbiology