Gallbladder and biliary tract candidiasis: nine cases and review.

Rev Infect Dis

Infectious Disease Division, Baystate Medical Center, Springfield, Massachusetts 01199.

Published: August 1990

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study reviews cases of biliary tract and gallbladder candidiasis, analyzing demographics, risk factors, and treatment strategies over a 3-year period.
  • Among the 31 cases examined, patients with uncomplicated candidal cholecystitis who underwent cholecystectomy alone did not experience mortality, while those with additional infections had worse outcomes requiring more complex treatment.
  • Physicians should remain vigilant for candidiasis in at-risk patients, but antifungal therapy is unnecessary for isolated gallbladder infections in nonneutropenic patients.

Article Abstract

We review biliary tract and gallbladder candidiasis and define patient demographics, risk factors, prognostic factors, and treatment strategies for this infection. This is a 3-year retrospective review of our experience with this disease and a review of the English-language literature. Thirty-one cases of biliary tract and gallbladder candidiasis, including nine in our series, have been examined. The same risk factors that predispose patients to other forms of candidal infection are implicated here. No mortality was found with uncomplicated candidal cholecystitis in nonneutropenic patients treated with cholecystectomy alone. Patients with associated extrabiliary tract candidiasis or candidemia had worse outcomes and required both surgical intervention and antifungal therapy. When risk factors exist for the development of biliary tract or gallbladder candidiasis, the physician should be alert to this possibility. There is no need for antifungal therapy in cases of isolated candidiasis of the gallbladder in nonneutropenic patients.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/clinids/12.3.483DOI Listing

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