AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the presence of candiduria (yeast in urine) in critically ill patients with solid or hematological cancers, analyzing its predictive factors and impact on patient outcomes.
  • The research included 173 patients, finding that 16.8% had candiduria, primarily caused by non-albicans Candida species, with previous antibiotic use and specific medical interventions identified as key risk factors.
  • Candiduria was linked to significantly higher mortality rates in the ICU, indicating that it serves as a marker of increased clinical severity in these patients.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the epidemiology of candiduria in critically-ill patients with solid/hematological malignancies and to assess its predictive factors and prognostic value.

Methods: All adult patients with confirmed solid/hematological malignancy admitted in the intensive care units (ICUs) for more than 48 h were retrospectively included. Urine cultures were sampled on admission and then whenever signs of sepsis were identified. Two groups were compared: (candiduria (+)) and (candiduria (-)).

Results: One-hundred-seventy-three patients were included. Solid cancer was the underlying oncological disease for 147 patients (85%) while 26 patients (15%) had hematological malignancies. Twenty-nine patients (16.8%) were diagnosed with candiduria, and 31 urinary samples grew Candida spp. Candida spp represented 55.8% of the total urinary isolates. Fourteen isolates (45.2%) of Candida albicans were identified. Among the 17 non-albicans isolates, Candida tropicalis was the most predominant (41.9%). Six patients (3.5%) had candidemia with no significant difference between candiduria(+) and candiduria(-) groups (respectively, 6.9% and 2.8%; p = 0.264). In multivariate analysis, previous exposure to quinolones (OR = 3.8, CI95% [1.4-8.3]; p = 0.008), mechanical ventilation (OR = 4.1, CI95% [1.1-14.7]; p = 0.034) and renal replacement therapy (OR = 3.5, 95%CI [1.2-9.7]; p = 0.017) were identified as independent factors predicting candiduria. Candiduria was associated with significantly higher ICU-mortality after adjusting for SAPSII score on admission (OR = 2.9 CI95% [1.3-6.8]; p = 0.009).

Conclusion: Candiduria is common in cancer critically-ill patients. We reported an increased rate of non-albicans species, over albicans species. Patients with candiduria had higher ICU mortality, probably related to higher frailty and clinical severity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mycmed.2022.101353DOI Listing

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