COVID-19-Associated Pulmonary Aspergillosis: A Year-Long Retrospective Case Series

COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA) refers to co-infection with Aspergillus spp. in patients with COVID-19. It has a higher mortality rate when compared with patients only infected with COVID-19, but we still know little about the epidemiology, diagnosis, and best treatment options fo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCOVID Vol. 2; no. 7; pp. 976 - 982
Main Authors Salas, Barbara, McCullagh, Iain, Cranfield, Katie, Fagan, Christine, Geering, Angela, Robb, Ali
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.07.2022
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Summary:COVID-19-associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA) refers to co-infection with Aspergillus spp. in patients with COVID-19. It has a higher mortality rate when compared with patients only infected with COVID-19, but we still know little about the epidemiology, diagnosis, and best treatment options for patients with CAPA. We report our findings from a year-long retrospective case series of patients with CAPA in two tertiary hospitals in the United Kingdom. We included all patients admitted to critical care with CAPA between March 2020–2021. We used the European Confederation for Medical Mycology and the International Society for Human and Animal Mycology consensus criteria to categorise CAPA. Demographic data, patients’ co-morbidities, time to and method of diagnosis, COVID-19 and aspergillosis treatment, and outcomes were analysed. Thirteen patients were diagnosed with probable CAPA between October/2020–March/2021, and 54.8% also had hypertension. Diagnosis was established after a median of 18 days post-COVID-19 infection, and a median of 7 days post-intubation. All patients had received corticosteroids, as well as tocilizumab (7; 53.8%) and remdesivir (3; 23%). Eleven patients received antifungal treatment. Nine (69%) patients died by 30 days post-ICU admission, one patient died on day 32, and three (23%) patients survived. CAPA has a very high mortality rate. We also identified three areas that merit further investigation: lack of positive tests between March–October 2020; COVID-19 treatments and possible relationship with increased CAPA rates; and the rationale behind antifungal treatment in our hospitals compared to recommended treatment in the literature.
ISSN:2673-8112
2673-8112
DOI:10.3390/covid2070073