Invasive Fungal Infections

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Medicine

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94 Terms

1
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what is yeast

a single celled form that reproduces by budding

2
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examples of yeast

candida, cryptococcus, saccharomyces, trichosporon

3
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what is mold

a multicellular hyphae

4
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examples of mold

septate fungi (aspergillus, fusarium), penicillium, Rhizopus, zygomycetae (Mucor)

5
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what are dimorphic fungi

grows as yeast in vivo or in vitro at 37 Celsius and grows as mold at 25 degrees Celsius

6
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dimorphic fungi can be reulgated by factors such as:

temperature, CO2 concentration, pH

7
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examples of dimorphic fungi

histoplasmosis, blastomycosis, coccidioidomycosis, sporotrichosis

8
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why is there an increase in occurrence of severe funcal infections

immunocompromised hosts, potent broad-spectrum antibiotics, indwelling IV catheters

9
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what is the most common cause of invasive fungal infections in humans

candida (a budding yeast)

10
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which candida species is the most clinically significant

C. albicans

11
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what occurs that allows candida to become pathogenic?

interruption of normal defense mechanism - intact integument is crucial in prevention of mucocutaneous of hematogenous candidiasis

12
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what are the three predisposing factors to candida infections

chemotherapy, exposure to immunosuppressive agents, and neutropenia

13
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clinical manifestations of candida

cutaneous syndrome of mucous membrane infections (diaper rash, thrush, esophagitis, vaginitis) - can cause candidemia and deep organ involvement with disseminated candida (respiratory, cardiac, endocarditis, urinary tract, arthritis, osteomyelitis, peritoneum, liver, spleen, gallbladder, intravascular, CNS)

14
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what type of mold is aspergillus?

ubiquitous

15
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which aspergillus species is the most common pathogenic?

A. fumigatus

16
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what pathogen is an important cause of life-threatening infections in immunocompromised patients

aspergillus

17
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pathogenesis of aspergillus

acquired by inhalation of airborne conidia (asexual spores) small enough to reach alveoli or paranasal sinuses

18
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clinical manifestations of invasive aspergillus

pulmonary aspergillosis, sinus aspergillosis, CNS

19
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clinical manifestations of allergic aspergillus

aspergillus sinusitis and allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis

20
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T/F: invasive apergillus has a very poor prognosis rate and causes ~1.8 million deaths per year

true

21
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risk factors for invasive aspergillosis

immunocompromised, chronic lung disease, and neutropenia

22
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site of action for azoles and polyenes

cell membrane (ergosterol inhibitors/binders)

23
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site of action for echinocandins

cell wall

24
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site of action for pyrimidine analogues

intracellular

25
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which drugs are polyenes?

amphotericin B and nystatin

26
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which drugs are echinocandins?

anidulafungin, caspofungin, micafungin

27
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which drugs are pyrimidine analogues

flucytosine

28
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dosing of nystatin

400,000-600,000 units QID x 7-14 days

29
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formulation of nystatin

oral suspension - not used systemically due to severe toxicity

30
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ADRs of nystatin

N/V/D

31
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dosing of AmB-deoxucholate (AmBd)

0.5-0.7 mg/kg/day

32
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dosing of lipid formualtion-AmB (LFAmB)

3-5 mg/kg/day

33
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which form of amphotericin B is perferred?

lipid formulation - reduces risk of nephrotoxicity but more expensive

34
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what should be done for patients recieing Ambd formulation due to risk of infusion reactions

premedication is recommedned 30-60 minutes prior

35
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ADRs of amphotericin B

nephrotoxicity, infusion related toxicities, electrolyte abnormalities

36
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formulations of fluconazole

IV/PO

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formulations of itraconazole

PO

38
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formulations of voriconazole

IV/PO

39
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formulations of posaconazole

PO

40
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formulations of isavconazole

IV/PO

41
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dosing for fluconazole

800 mg load and 400 mg daily

42
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dosing for itraconazole

200 mg TID x 3 days then BID//daily

43
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dosing of voriconazole

IV: 6 mg/kg x 2 doses then 3-4 mg/kg Q12H

PO: 400 mg BID then 200 mg BID

44
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dosing of posaconazole

200 mg QID or 200 mg BID

45
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dosing of isavuconazole

200 mg Q8H x 2 days, then 200 mg daily

46
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clinical pearls for fluconazole

~90% bioavailability, and excellent CSF penetration

47
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clinical pearls for itraconazole

mucosal disease after failing fluconazole, poor CSF penetration, capsules have increased absoprtion with food, and oral solutions should be taken on an empty stomach

48
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clinical pearls for voriconazole

step down therapy for C.krusei/glabrata, 90% bioavilability without regard to food intake, PO requires dosage reduction for hepatic impairment, excellent CSF penetration

49
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clinical pearls for posaconazole

fatty foods increase the bioavailability of suspension, saturable kinetics

50
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clinical pearls for isavuconazole

98% bioavailability, causes QTc shortening not prolongation

51
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examples of new azole drugs for dermatological infections

albaconazole and efinaconazole

52
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new azole drug for invasive infections, candida and aspergillus sp.

ravuconazole

53
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DDI with fluconazole

inhibitor: CYP2C19, CYP2C9, CYP3A4

substrate: CYP3A4

54
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DDI with itraconazole

inhibitor: CYP2C9, CYP3A4

substrate: CYP3A4

55
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DDI for posaconazole

inhibitor: CYP3A4

56
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DDI for voriconazole

inhibitor: CYP2C19, CYP2C9, CYP3A4

substrate: CYP2C19, CYP2C9, CYP3A4

57
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DDI for isavuconazole

inhibitor: CYP3A4

substrate: CYP3A4

58
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triazole ADRs

QTc prolongation, elevation of liver enzymes, alopecia

59
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which triazole can cause concentration-dependent visual disturbances, hallucinations, and nightmares with

voriconazole

60
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which triazole does not cause Qtc prolongation

isavuconazole

61
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which triazole can cause elevation of liver enzymes more with high oral doses?

voriconazole

62
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which triazole is associated with alopeica at prolonged/high doses?

fluconazole

63
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how are echinocandins available?

IV

64
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dosing of caspofungin

70 mg load then 50 mg daily

65
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dosing of anidulafungin

200 mg load then 100 mg daily

66
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dosing of micafungin

100 mg daily

67
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clinical pearls for caspofungin

dosage reduction recommended for moderate-severe hepatic dysfunction

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clinical pearls of anidulafungin and micafungin

no dosafge adjustments required

69
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echinocandin properties

few ADRs (may see increase in LFT0, similar pharmacologic properties, administered IV only, do not require renal dose adjustments, large MW compared to azoles, do not penetrate bone or CNS very well

70
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dosing for flucytosine

25 mg/kg/dose PO QID

71
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pearls of flucytosine

should not be used alone, active form is a chemotherapeutic agent

72
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ADRs for flucytosine

dose-related myelosuppression, acute hepatic and renal injury, hypokalemia

73
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which candida is instrinsically resistant to fluconazole

C. Krusei

74
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why is C. auris concerning

resistant to triazoles and amphotericin B

75
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what is the portion of yeast called that acts as roots and tries to ‘wiggle’ in between cells

Hypha

76
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what value is neutropenia

< 500

77
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T/F: allergic aspergillus is not typically treated

true

78
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which patient population experiences higher rates of invasive aspergillosis?

those with COPD

79
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what is the name of the airborne particle inhaled from aspergillus

conidia

80
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why do COPD patients get aspergillosis more than other groups?

lack of pulmonary defenses allows the conidia to germinate and ‘wiggle’ into the cells of the alveoli/lungs

81
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best order of antibiotic classes to treat aspergillus

azoles > amphotericin B > random combos of drugs…

82
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which medications should only be used as salvage therapy to treat aspergillus

echinocandins

83
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MOA of polyenes

binds ergosterol and makes cell more permeable so the fungal insides/contents flood out and cause cell death

84
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when is nystatin used

for oral candidiasis or local yeast infections

85
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which drug is extremely toxic to cells

amphotericin B

86
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which electrolyte abnormalities can be caused by amphotericin B

hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia

87
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which triazole is best for invasive aspergillosis

voriconazole

88
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benefits of new azoles (albaconazole, efinaconazole, ravuconazole)

broader spectrum, oral bioavailable, less DDIs

89
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what are the two things to know for azoles?

QTc prolongation and lots of DDIs

90
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which drug is fantastic for candida infections but not aspergillus

echinocandins

91
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benefits of echinocandins

low DDIs, once daily dosing, low resistant rate

92
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which drug is good for CNS infections

flucytosine

93
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is aspergillus a mold or yeast?

mold

94
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is candida a mold or yeast

yeast