Sudden death in a patient with bone marrow transplant by a fungus among us.

BMJ Case Rep

Department of Medical Oncology, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

Published: November 2014

Mucormycosis is rare, presenting as breakthrough infection among haematological and transplant patients on prophylaxis with voriconazole. We report an unusual presentation of this infection, that which is pneumonia progressing to cardiac arrest. A 68-year-old woman with refractory acute myelogenous leukaemia on voriconazole prophylaxis was initially admitted for neutropenic fever and pneumonia. She was discharged improved on antibiotics and voriconazole for presumed aspergillosis. She returned after 1 month with the same presentation. She eventually improved on antibiotics and voriconazole, and eventually received bone marrow transplantation. Three days later, she developed pleuritic chest pain, dyspnoea, and hypoxia requiring intubation. An hour after intubation, the patient arrested and expired. Autopsy revealed Rhizopus pneumonitis with pulmonary infarction, and emboli to her cerebellum, heart, thyroid and kidney. Mucormycosis is an emerging, fatal infection that should be suspected in haematological and transplant patients who deteriorate on voriconazole.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4244385PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2014-207403DOI Listing

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