AI Article Synopsis

  • A study at MD Anderson Cancer Center reviewed esophageal candidiasis (EC) in cancer patients, focusing on clinical features, risk factors, and treatment outcomes during the azole era.
  • The majority of the 323 patients had solid tumors, with 33% being asymptomatic; symptoms increased with higher endoscopic grades, indicating more severe EC.
  • Fluconazole treatment failed in 13% of patients, mainly predicted by underlying esophageal disease, and those with Candida invading the mucosal layer were more likely to experience treatment failure.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Clinical presentation and outcomes of esophageal candidiasis (EC) in cancer patients are scarcely studied in the azole era, as is the correlation between clinical, endoscopic, and histopathological EC manifestations.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the risk factors, clinical features, and outcomes of pathology-documented EC cases at MD Anderson Cancer Center. We further assessed associations between presence of symptoms, standardized 4-stage endoscopic grade (Kodsi classification), histopathological data, and fluconazole treatment failure.

Results: Among 323 cancer patients with EC, 89% had solid tumors, most commonly esophageal cancer (29%). Thirty-three percent of EC patients were asymptomatic. The proportion of symptomatic EC patients significantly increased with endoscopic grade (P = 0.005). Among 202 patients receiving oral fluconazole, 27 (13%) had treatment failure. Underlying esophageal disease was the only independent predictor of fluconazole treatment failure (odds ratio: 3.88, P = 0.005). Endoscopic grade correlated significantly with Candida organism burden (Correlation coefficient [ρ] = 0.21, P < 0.01) and neutrophilic inflammation (ρ = 0.18, P < 0.01). Candida invasion of the squamous mucosal layer was associated with treatment failure (P = 0.049).

Conclusions: EC was predominantly encountered in patients with solid tumors. One-third of EC patients were asymptomatic, challenging traditional symptom-based diagnosis. The development of integrated clinicopathological scoring systems could further guide the therapeutic management of cancer patients with EC.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2024.106172DOI Listing

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