AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacterial enterocolitis is a common and serious complication during intensive chemotherapy, particularly in neutropenic cancer patients, often leading to high morbidity and mortality.
  • Mucormycosis-associated neutropenic enterocolitis can complicate diagnosis and treatment, as indicated by two pediatric leukemia cases where patients did not improve with standard bacterial treatments and ultimately required surgical intervention.
  • The study highlights the high risk and lethality of fungal infections in these patients, emphasizing the need for improved understanding and strategies for diagnosis and management in the context of febrile neutropenia.

Article Abstract

Background: Bacterial enterocolitis is one of the most common neutropenic fever complications during intensive chemotherapy. Despite aggressive antibacterial treatments, this complication usually imposes high morbidity and mortality in cancer patients. Management of bacterial neutropenic enterocolitis are well known; however, management of fungal neutropenic enterocolitis may be more challenging and needs to be investigated. Prompt diagnosis and treatment may be life-saving, especially in patients at risk of mucormycosis-associated neutropenic enterocolitis.

Case Presentation: We report two mucormycosis-associated neutropenic enterocolitis cases in pediatric leukemic patients receiving salvage chemotherapy for disease relapse. Both patients' clinical signs and symptoms differ from classical bacterial neutropenic enterocolitis. They were empirically treated as bacterial neutropenic enterocolitis with anti-gram-negative combination therapy. Despite broad-spectrum antimicrobial treatment, no clinical improvement was achieved, and both of them were complicated with severe abdominal pain necessitating surgical intervention. Mucormycosis is diagnosed by immunohistopathologic examination in multiple intraoperative intestinal tissue biopsies. Both patients died despite antifungal treatment with liposomal amphotericin-B and surgical intervention.

Conclusion: Mucormycosis-associated neutropenic enterocolitis is one of the most unfavorable and untreatable side effects of salvage chemotherapy in leukemic children with disease relapse. This report could be of considerable insight to the clinicians and scientists who counter the enigma of fungal infections during febrile neutropenia and help to understand better diagnosis and management.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8686658PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06957-0DOI Listing

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