1. Introduction
The incidence of invasive fungal diseases (IFDs) has significantly increased over the last decades. IFDs of the central nervous system (CNS) are particularly severe with high morbidity and mortality rates among immunocompromised patients. Dissemination to CNS can originate by hematogenous spread of the fungus mostly from the lungs and sinuses. Filamentous fungi, mostly
Aspergillus spp. but also
Fusarium spp. or
Mucorales, may affect the CNS in children [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6].
Clinical symptoms are often unusual or atypical and may even be absent in a significant proportion of patients with IFDs of the CNS (CNS-IFDs), which makes early diagnosis and prompt initiation of antifungal treatment difficult. Among neurological symptoms as hemi- or quadriplegia, seizures, headache, cerebral palsy, ataxia, hallucination, seizures, and blurred vision or amaurosis have been described [
2,
3,
6,
7].
This study aims to present the data of pediatric CNS-IFD cases from 8 Greek Hematology-Oncology Departments during a 15-year period (2007-2022) that were collected and analyzed by the Infection Working Group (IWG) of the Hellenic Society of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology.
2. Patients and Methods
The study was retrospectively conducted in the 8 Hematology-Oncology Departments and Units of Greece and consisted of collection of clinical and laboratory data, clinical courses and outcomes of the CNS-IFD cases diagnosed in pediatric hematology-oncology patients (0-16 years) for the period 2007-2022.
Pediatric patients receiving chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy for an underlying malignancy were included in the study. The study eligibility criteria of proven or probable fungal infection according to the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer/Mycosis Study Group (EORTC/MSG
) were used [
8]. According to these criteria, proven CNS fungal infection was diagnosed by CNS imaging or a macroscopic autopsy finding in conjunction with a positive microbiological result in the brain tissue or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Positive microbiological results included a positive culture or microscopic evidence of hyphae or positive galactomannan (GM) test or positive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for a fungus. Probable fungal infection was defined when compatible CNS imaging findings were combined with proven or probable invasive fungal infections at a site outside the CNS.
The sites of fungal infections were classified as localized when confined in CNS only (isolated or disseminated in CNS), or multifocal when the infection was disseminated to two or more non-contiguous locations/organs.
Outcome was defined as survival or death at the last contact of follow-up. Mortality was assessed as all-cause mortality during the course of the fungal infection.
The medical records of the patients were thoroughly reviewed retrospectively in order to extrapolate and report all appropriate information and data including demographic characteristics, type and stage of underlying malignant disease, potential risk factors (prolonged neutropenia, prior treatment with corticosteroids, type of chemotherapy, other treatment modalities, hospitalization of more than 20 days, prior ICU stay, comorbidities), clinical symptoms, site(s) of infection, radiological findings (brain and spine MRI), laboratory findings, treatment (antifungal drug therapy, previous prophylactic antifungal therapy, surgery, duration of treatment), outcome and subsequent sequelae.
3. Results
During the study period, twelve cases of CNS-IFDs were recorded from 5 out of 8 Pediatric Hematology-Oncology Departments existing in Greece. There were eleven males and one female with a median age of 9.5 years at the time of infection (range: 2-16 years).
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) was the primary underlying malignancy in nine patients, whereas acute myeloid leukemia (AML), Ewing sarcoma and rhabdomyosarcoma in one patient each. Among the nine patients with ALL, one child suffered from relapsed ALL post hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and one from refractory ALL.
All patients were under intensive chemotherapy for their underlying malignancy according to current international protocols: six patients were treated according to ALLIC BFM 2009, two according to AIEOP-BFM ALL 2017, one based on ALLIC REL Guidance 2016, one based on AML BFM 2004, one with iEuroEwing and one with RMS88 Protocol (
Table 1).
Seven out of twelve patients (58.3%) had been hospitalized for more than 20 days. Seven patients with ALL (58.3%) had received prolonged corticosteroid treatment, and all presented with severe neutropenia with a neutrophil count <500 μL at the time of diagnosis.
Eleven (11/12) patients presented with one or more CNS-related symptoms: 10 patients presented with headache (in 4/10 as the only CNS-related presenting symptom), 4 with seizures (in 1/4 as the only CNS-related presenting symptom), 2 each with cerebral palsy or blurred/impaired vision, one each with ataxia or with hallucinations, and 6 with various other symptoms such as hypotonia, coma or irritability.
Abnormal MRI findings were found in all patients: brain abscess in 4 patients, meningoencephalitis/meningitis in 3 patients, granuloma in one patient, sub-dense brain lesions in 4 patients, edema of ethmoid cells, frontal sinuses and frontal lobe infiltration in one patient, and soft tissue in the visceral skull region and part of the frontal sinus in one.
Multifocal fungal infection was observed in 6 patients (50%). Concomitant lung involvement was revealed in 3 cases, sinuses involvement in 4 and liver involvement in one case. Disseminated disease was diagnosed in 8 out of 12 patients (66.7%). Neurological symptoms, MRI findings, and evidence of disease (proven, probable) according to diagnostic tools are shown in
Table 2.
Nine proven CNS-IFDs and three probable cases were diagnosed (
Table 3). Proven IFD was documented by histology or culture in all 9 patients. Causative pathogens in proven cases included: three
Mucorales, two
Aspergillus spp., two
Candida albicans, one
Fusarium oxysporum and one
Cryptococcus neoformans. Causative pathogens in probable cases included: two
Aspergillus spp. and one
Candida spp.
Nine patients (75%) had received antifungal prophylaxis before the diagnosis of CNS IFD. The majority of patients underwent antifungal prophylaxis with fluconazole or micafungin (8/9 patients). All patients received appropriate therapy according to the isolated pathogen, mean duration of therapy was 130 days (median 69.5 days, range 19-364 days). Antifungal therapy included liposomal amphotericin B (LAmB) at doses varying between 3-10mg/kg/day in all patients (12/12) alone or combined with other antifungal agents. Liposomal amphotericin B alone was given in 3 out of 12 patients (2 patients with Aspergillus spp. and one with Cryptococcus neoformans). Combined antifungal therapy was administered to 9 patients and the most common combinations were LAmB plus voriconazole (6 patients) and LAmB plus posaconazole (2 patients). Two patients underwent additional surgical treatment. Six cases were complicated and required ICU admission. Three of 12 patients (25%) died, two patients due to IFD (16.7%) and one due to underlying disease.
4. Discussion
Invasive mycoses of the CNS are severe forms of infections associated with significant morbidity and mortality [
2,
3,
4,
5,
6]. The frequency of IFDs has seen a notable increase over the last decades but there is still a scarcity of epidemiological data concerning CNS-IFDs in pediatric populations [
2]. Although there are newer diagnostic tools and antifungal agents for treatment, CNS-IFDs are still difficult to diagnose and to treat promptly and successfully. Ιn a multicenter retrospective study in pediatric patients with cancer, Cesaro et al reported an incidence of 3.3% of CNS-IFDs [
9]. In another prospective surveillance study focusing on adults, 14.1% of patients with hematological malignancies were diagnosed with invasive mold infections (IMD) affecting the CNS (4).
Numerous risk factors for IFDs among pediatric patients with hemato-oncological diseases have been identified in a recent systematic review by Fisher et al [
10]. These include underlying diseases such as AML, high-risk ALL or relapsed leukemia, prolonged and high-dose corticosteroid use, prolonged and profound neutropenia, comorbidities and advanced age. In our patient cohort, out of the 12 individuals diagnosed with CNS-IFDs, 10 had acute leukemia, with 9 having ALL and one having AML. Among the ALL cases, 2 patients suffered from relapsed or refractory disease. While patients with ALL generally have a lower risk of IFDs compared to those with AML or leukemia relapse, ALL still represents the largest group of patients at risk for IFDs [
11]. Moreover, in our patient cohort, all cases of CNS-IFDs occurred during intensive chemotherapy phases of treatment characterized by profound neutropenia (mean absolute neutrophil count <500/μL). Prolonged corticosteroid treatment was also observed in seven out of twelve patients.
Aspergillus species were found to be the most frequently identified fungi in our cohort (two proven and two probable cases), with other rare molds especially
Mucorales following in frequency (all proven cases). In general, molds were by far the most frequent pathogens causing CNS-IFDs as compared to yeasts (8 vs 4 cases). Invasive mold infections mainly affect the lung but may also occur in other sites such as liver, kidney, bones or the CNS. Involvement of the CNS represents an especially severe form of fungal infection, posing challenges not only in diagnosis but also in treatment. The significant occurrence of CNS involvement in pulmonary mold infections has led to the recommendation in the most recent European Conference on Infections in Leukemia (ECIL) guidelines to contemplate CNS imaging in patients with pulmonary mold infection, even in the absence of neurological symptoms [
8]. In our study, lung involvement was revealed in three cases, liver involvement in one and sinus in four patients. This observation corroborates the etiopathogenic hypothesis that IFDs affecting the CNS could stem from the hematogenous dissemination of an infection originating from another primary site, primarily the lung [
3,
12]. In a report from the Israeli Study Group of Childhood Leukemia, 59% of patients with mucormycosis presented with a rhinocerebral pattern of infection with eight of them showing adjacent spread to the CNS [
13].
In our series of CNS-IFDs, eleven out of the twelve patients exhibited symptoms related to the CNS, with headache being the most prominent among them (83,3%, 10 of 12 patients) followed by seizures in 30%. In four patients, headache was the only presenting CNS-related symptom, while seizures were in one patient. Nevertheless, symptoms may be non-specific and may encompass a range of focal and non-focal neurological manifestations. Additionally, the percentage of symptomatic patients and the type of symptoms may vary in studies due to differences in registries. In our cohort one patient had no CNS-related symptoms but had abnormal brain MRI findings. Indeed, it is intriguing to note that almost one-third of children with CNS invasive mold infections were neurologically asymptomatic in a study involving 29 children and CNS involvement was detected through diagnostic evaluations for pulmonary or liver fungal infections, or incidentally during routine CNS imaging [
7]. This highlights the importance of CNS imaging in patients with proven or probable mold infection outside the CNS. In a retrospective study of 19 pediatric patients with proven or probable CNS-IMD, fungal abscesses and parenchymal inflammation (cerebritis) were the most frequently observed features [
6]. In our cohort of patients, abscess was revealed in 4 patients while meningoencephalitis/meningitis findings in three patients. The edema of ethmoid cells, frontal sinuses, and frontal lobe infiltration in one patient, and soft tissue in the visceral skull region and part of the frontal sinus in one reveals the initial mucosal inflammation and angio-invasive nature of the fungus leading to direct extension through vascular invasion. Nevertheless, a definitive diagnosis of CNS-IFDs entails cultures obtained through sterile procedures and/or histopathological, cytopathological, or direct microscopic evaluations [
3,
14]. Proven IFD was documented by histology or culture in all nine patients of our cohort. Several non-culture-based assays have been developed as adjunctive diagnostic tools, the ECIL guidelines recommend the GM evaluation in the CSF in immunocompromised patients with suspected CNS invasive mold disease, with a proposed threshold of 1.0 [
15]. However, it is crucial to interpret the test results carefully, as there are limitations such as poor positive predictive values. Since data on molecular assays are limited and heterogenous in the pediatric setting, the current ECIL guidelines have not included molecular testing-specific recommendations for children [
15].
Initiating effective antifungal treatment promptly remains essential for the therapeutic management of CNS-IFDs. Recent pediatric guidelines suggest voriconazole as the preferred treatment for invasive aspergillosis (A-It) and LAmB as an alternative in case of suspected or confirmed azole resistance (B-It) [
15]. It is important to mention that voriconazole is not approved for children under 2 years old, and therapeutic drug monitoring is highly recommended to maintain serum levels >1–2 mg/L [
14,
15]. LAmB, on the other hand, is approved for children of all ages. The most used therapeutic agents in our series were LAmB followed by voriconazole. Interestingly, all our patients received LAmB alone or combined with other antifungal treatments. The concurrent utilization of combined antifungal therapy lacks clinical endorsement or support from existing guidelines but is widely used when management reasoning eclipses evidence-based medicine [
15]. Therefore, in numerous cases, including ours, multidrug treatment was administered due to clinicians' concerns regarding systemic dissemination and the significant morbidity associated with IFDs, which may also lead to delays in chemotherapy. Despite the poor penetration through the blood-brain barrier due to their high molecular mass and their high protein binding, echinocandins were used in combination with LAmB in two patients with
Candida albicans [
16]. Despite micafungin not being detectable in the CSF, therapeutically effective levels of micafungin in brain tissue of rabbits could be achieved during tissue inflammation and/or necrosis, as demonstrated by the successful clearance of
C. albicans from the CNS [
17,
18].
From a therapeutic perspective, our study reaffirms that surgical intervention has been employed in a minority of cases (2 patients with mucormycosis and 1 with fusariosis). A multidisciplinary approach including surgical intervention is an important pillar for the successful management of disseminated mucormycosis and should be deliberated on a case-by-case basis [
2,
19]. In children with CNS mucormycosis, high-dose LAMB (5–10 mg/kg) is the treatment of choice.
Twenty five percent of patients died in our cohort including one patient who died from the underlying hematological disease. It is important to acknowledge that rates may vary across different studies, influenced by factors such as underlying disease, phase of anticancer treatment or patient characteristics [
1,
20,
21]. In addition to prompt initiation of effective antifungal treatment for IFDs, guidelines advocate for the management of predisposing conditions in both adults and children such as severe neutropenia or immunosuppressive treatment [
14,
15].
We acknowledge various limitations in our study, such as the lack of standardized procedures in diagnostics and management strategies during the last 15 years at different centers. However, this variability highlights the need for optimization of antifungal therapy in children with hemato-oncological malignancies worldwide. Variations between centers in both the initiation and duration of antifungal therapy underscores an important research gap. However, it is worth emphasizing that our study offers valuable insights into the epidemiology and outcomes of CNS-IFDs in children and it is the first study addressing this field. Our analysis possesses distinctive and significant strengths. We included only patients with proven and probable CNS-IFDs and we provided information about the use of antifungal prophylaxis.
CNS-IFDs should be suspected even in the absence of neurological signs, as described in one patient of our cohort, and we suggest perform a routine diagnostic evaluation in suspected immunocompromised children. Our study presents the first nationwide cohort focused on CNS-IFDs. Although it is confirmatory of previous findings, we mentioned that mold cases were twice as common as yeast cases, and that only two patients died due to CNS-IFDs.
Author Contributions
L.P. conceptualization, data acquisition, analysis and interpretation, writing, review and editing, M.K writing, review and editing, K.A. data acquisition, analysis and interpretation and writing, K.A, T-S.T., A-E.S., V.A., S.S, G.A, M.F, E.P., E.H., A.K. and V.P. contributed patients’ clinical data, S.P. and D.D. contributed patients’ clinical data and review, E.R. supervision, review, editing, A.T. conceptualization, supervision, project administration, review and editing. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This research received no external funding.
Acknowledgments
We are deeply grateful to physicians, nurses and other staff of the Departments of Pediatric Hematology- Oncology in Greece for their dedicated care of the patients.
Conflicts of Interest
No.
References
- Castagnola E, Cesaro S, Giacchino M, Livadiotti S, Tucci F, Zanazzo G, et al. Fungal infections in children with cancer: a prospective, multicenter surveillance study. The Pediatric infectious disease journal. 2006 Jul;25(7):634-9. PubMed Epub 2006/06/29. eng. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Luckowitsch M, Rudolph H, Bochennek K, Porto L, Lehrnbecher T. Central Nervous System Mold Infections in Children with Hematological Malignancies: Advances in Diagnosis and Treatment. Journal of fungi (Basel, Switzerland). 2021 Feb 26;7(3). PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC7996787. Epub 2021/03/04. eng. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Schwartz S, Kontoyiannis DP, Harrison T, Ruhnke M. Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of fungal infections of the CNS. The Lancet Neurology. 2018 Apr;17(4):362-72. PubMed Epub 2018/02/27. eng. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Montagna MT, Lovero G, Coretti C, Martinelli D, Delia M, De Giglio O, et al. SIMIFF study: Italian fungal registry of mold infections in hematological and non-hematological patients. Infection. 2014 Feb;42(1):141-51. PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC3906525. Epub 2013/10/24. eng. [PubMed]
- Pana ZD, Groll AH, Lehrnbecher T. An Update on the Diagnosis and Treatment of Invasive Mold Disease of the Central Nervous System in Children. The Pediatric infectious disease journal. 2023 Apr 1;42(4):e119-e21. PubMed Epub 2023/02/03. eng. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Porto L, You SJ, Attarbaschi A, Cario G, Döring M, Moser O, et al. Invasive Mold Infection of the Central Nervous System in Immunocompromised Children. Journal of fungi (Basel, Switzerland). 2020 Oct 16;6(4). PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC7711511. Epub 2020/10/22. eng. [PubMed]
- Lauten M, Attarbaschi A, Cario G, Döring M, Moser O, Mücke U, et al. Invasive mold disease of the central nervous system in children and adolescents with cancer or undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: Analysis of 29 contemporary patients. Pediatric blood & cancer. 2019 Aug;66(8):e27806. PubMed Epub 2019/05/09. eng. [PubMed]
- Donnelly JP, Chen SC, Kauffman CA, Steinbach WJ, Baddley JW, Verweij PE, et al. Revision and Update of the Consensus Definitions of Invasive Fungal Disease From the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer and the Mycoses Study Group Education and Research Consortium. Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. 2020 Sep 12;71(6):1367-76. PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC7486838. Epub 2019/12/06. eng. [PubMed]
- Cesaro S, Tridello G, Castagnola E, Calore E, Carraro F, Mariotti I, et al. Retrospective study on the incidence and outcome of proven and probable invasive fungal infections in high-risk pediatric onco-hematological patients. European journal of haematology. 2017 Sep;99(3):240-8. PubMed Epub 2017/05/31. eng. [PubMed]
- Fisher BT, Robinson PD, Lehrnbecher T, Steinbach WJ, Zaoutis TE, Phillips B, et al. Risk Factors for Invasive Fungal Disease in Pediatric Cancer and Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation: A Systematic Review. Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society. 2018 Aug 17;7(3):191-8. PubMed Epub 2017/05/27. eng. [PubMed]
- Lehrnbecher T, Schöning S, Poyer F, Georg J, Becker A, Gordon K, et al. Incidence and Outcome of Invasive Fungal Diseases in Children With Hematological Malignancies and/or Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation: Results of a Prospective Multicenter Study. Frontiers in microbiology. 2019;10:681. PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC6476895. Epub 2019/05/02. eng. [PubMed]
- Candoni A, Klimko N, Busca A, Di Blasi R, Shadrivova O, Cesaro S, et al. Fungal infections of the central nervous system and paranasal sinuses in onco-haematologic patients. Epidemiological study reporting the diagnostic-therapeutic approach and outcome in 89 cases. Mycoses. 2019 Mar;62(3):252-60. PubMed Epub 2018/12/20. eng. [PubMed]
- Elitzur S, Arad-Cohen N, Barg A, Litichever N, Bielorai B, Elhasid R, et al. Mucormycosis in children with haematological malignancies is a salvageable disease: a report from the Israeli Study Group of Childhood Leukemia. British journal of haematology. 2020 Apr;189(2):339-50. PubMed Epub 2019/12/31. eng. [PubMed]
- Warris A, Lehrnbecher T, Roilides E, Castagnola E, Brüggemann RJM, Groll AH. ESCMID-ECMM guideline: diagnosis and management of invasive aspergillosis in neonates and children. Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. 2019 Sep;25(9):1096-113. PubMed Epub 2019/06/04. eng. [PubMed]
- Groll AH, Pana D, Lanternier F, Mesini A, Ammann RA, Averbuch D, et al. 8th European Conference on Infections in Leukaemia: 2020 guidelines for the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of invasive fungal diseases in paediatric patients with cancer or post-haematopoietic cell transplantation. The Lancet Oncology. 2021 Jun;22(6):e254-e69. PubMed Epub 2021/04/04. eng. [PubMed]
- Nau R, Sörgel F, Eiffert H. Penetration of drugs through the blood-cerebrospinal fluid/blood-brain barrier for treatment of central nervous system infections. Clinical microbiology reviews. 2010 Oct;23(4):858-83. PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC2952976. Epub 2010/10/12. eng. [PubMed]
- Hope WW, Mickiene D, Petraitis V, Petraitiene R, Kelaher AM, Hughes JE, et al. The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of micafungin in experimental hematogenous Candida meningoencephalitis: implications for echinocandin therapy in neonates. The Journal of infectious diseases. 2008 Jan 1;197(1):163-71. PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC2732769. Epub 2008/01/04. eng. [PubMed]
- Groll AH, Mickiene D, Petraitis V, Petraitiene R, Ibrahim KH, Piscitelli SC, et al. Compartmental pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution of the antifungal echinocandin lipopeptide micafungin (FK463) in rabbits. Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy. 2001 Dec;45(12):3322-7. PubMed Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC90832. Epub 2001/11/16. eng. [PubMed]
- Jensen TSR, Arendrup MC, von Buchvald C, Frandsen TL, Juhler M, Nygaard U. Successful Treatment of Rhino-Orbital-Cerebral Mucormycosis in a Child With Leukemia. Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology. 2017 May;39(4):e211-e5. PubMed Epub 2016/11/15. eng. [PubMed]
- Dotis J, Iosifidis E, Roilides E. Central nervous system aspergillosis in children: a systematic review of reported cases. International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases. 2007 Sep;11(5):381-93. PubMed Epub 2007/05/19. eng. [PubMed]
- Mattiuzzi G, Giles FJ. Management of intracranial fungal infections in patients with haematological malignancies. British journal of haematology. 2005 Nov;131(3):287-300. PubMed Epub 2005/10/18. eng. [PubMed]
Table 1.
Demographic and clinical data including predisposing factors.
Table 1.
Demographic and clinical data including predisposing factors.
Case |
Sex |
Age (yrs) |
Underlying disease |
Protocol |
Disease phase |
Neutropenia |
Hospitalization >20d |
Chemo |
Cortisone |
Prophylaxis |
1 |
M |
16 |
Common B-ALL |
ALL-IC BFM 2009 |
Induction |
yes |
no |
yes |
yes |
yes |
2 |
F |
2 |
AML |
AML 2004 |
Refractory |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
yes |
3 |
M |
15 |
Relapsed ALL after HSCT |
ALL-IC REL 2016 |
Induction |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
4 |
M |
11 |
Refractory ALL |
ALL-IC BFM 2009 |
Refractory |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
yes |
5 |
M |
8 |
ALL |
ALL-IC BFM 2009 |
Induction |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
6 |
M |
11.5 |
T-ALL |
AIEOP-BFM ALL 2017 |
Protocol ΙΒ1+2 long |
yes |
no |
yes |
yes |
no |
7 |
M |
15 |
T-ALL |
AIEOP-BFM ALL 2017 |
Protocol ΙΒ1+2 long |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
yes |
8 |
M |
6.75 |
Sarcoma Ewing |
iEuroEwing |
Protocol R2 IEVC- ΙΕ |
yes |
no |
yes |
no |
no |
9 |
M |
5 |
B-ALL |
ALL-IC BFM 2009 |
Protocol M |
yes |
no |
yes |
yes |
no |
10 |
M |
2 |
B-ALL |
ALL-IC BFM 2009 |
Protocol I |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
11 |
M |
3.2 |
ALL |
ALL-cIC BFM 2009 |
Induction |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
12 |
M |
11 |
RMS alveolar |
RMS88 Protocol |
Chemotherapy |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
no |
Table 2.
MRI findings, and evidence of disease (proven, probable) according to diagnostic tools.
Table 2.
MRI findings, and evidence of disease (proven, probable) according to diagnostic tools.
Case |
Neuro-symptoms |
MRI Findings |
Multifocal IFD |
Proven/ Probable IFD |
Biopsy/CSF |
Culture |
PCR |
Biomarkers |
Pathogens |
1 |
yes |
yes |
yes |
proven |
yes |
no |
yes |
- |
Aspergillus spp. |
2 |
yes |
yes |
no |
proven |
yes |
yes |
no |
no |
Absidia spp. |
3 |
yes |
yes |
yes |
probable |
no |
no |
no |
yes |
Candida spp. |
4 |
yes |
yes |
yes |
probable |
no |
no |
yes |
yes |
Aspergillus spp. |
5 |
yes |
yes |
yes |
proven |
yes |
yes |
no |
no |
Mucor spp. |
6 |
no |
yes |
no |
proven |
yes |
- |
- |
- |
Candida albicans |
7 |
yes |
yes |
yes |
proven |
yes |
yes |
- |
- |
Fusarium oxysporum |
8 |
yes |
yes |
no |
proven |
yes |
yes |
- |
- |
Candida albicans |
9 |
yes |
yes |
no |
proven |
yes |
no |
yes |
- |
Cryptococcus neoformans |
10 |
yes |
yes |
no |
probable |
no |
no |
no |
yes |
Aspergillus spp. |
11 |
yes |
yes |
yes |
proven |
yes |
no |
- |
- |
Rhizopus arrhizus |
12 |
yes |
yes |
no |
proven |
yes |
- |
- |
- |
Aspergillus spp. |
Table 3.
Pathogens isolated from the cases. A: proven; B: probable.
Table 3.
Pathogens isolated from the cases. A: proven; B: probable.
A. Proven Pathogens |
No |
Aspergillus spp. |
2 |
Mucor spp. |
1 |
Rhizopus arrhizus |
1 |
|
Absidia spp. |
1 |
|
Fusarium oxysporum |
1 |
Candida albicans |
2 |
Cryptococcusneoformans
|
1 |
B. Probable Pathogens |
No |
Aspergillus spp. |
2 |
Candida spp. |
1 |
|
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).