A Single-Center Retrospective Evaluation of The Incidence and Survival of Invasive Fungal Infection in Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplant Patients
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Original Article
VOLUME: 12 ISSUE: 4
P: 310 - 317
December 2024

A Single-Center Retrospective Evaluation of The Incidence and Survival of Invasive Fungal Infection in Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplant Patients

Namik Kemal Med J 2024;12(4):310-317
1. İskenderun State Hospital, Clinic of Gastroenterology, Hatay, Turkey
2. Ege University Medical Faculty Hospital, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Hematology, İzmir, Turkey
3. Ege University Medical Faculty Hospital, Department of Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, İzmir, Türkiye
No information available.
No information available
Received Date: 12.08.2024
Accepted Date: 05.10.2024
Online Date: 18.12.2024
Publish Date: 18.12.2024
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ABSTRACT

Aim

The incidence of invasive fungal infection (IFI) is high in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Despite new antifungal agents, IFI is still an important cause of mortality. Our study aimed to determine the risk factors of IFI and its effect on mortality.

Materials and Methods

One hundred and fifty-four patients who underwent allogeneic transplantation were included in the study. Demographic characteristics, underlying disease, transplantation characteristics, and IFI status of all patients were evaluated retrospectively. The study group was divided into two: 75 patients with definite, high probability and possible IFI (group 1) and 79 patients without IFI (group 2) according to the criteria of the international committee.

Results

Of 154 patients, 92 were male (59.7%) and 62 were female (40.3%) with a mean age of 41.87±14.04 years (range: 18-67 years). The most common transplant indication was acute myeloid leukemia in 58 patients (37.7%). In the analyzes performed on two groups, more IFI were observed in those who had acute graft-versus-host disease after transplantation (p= 0.035) and in those with CMV reactivation (p=0.002). The mean neutropenia duration was 30.89±20.40 in group 1 and 19.98±11.01 in group 2 (p=0.001). Underlying diseases, preparation regimen, donor compatibility, consanguineous marriage and IFI history were not found to be significant in terms of the development of IFI. The mortality rate due to IFI was found to be 24%. The mean duration of neutropenia was found to be longer in patients who died (p=0.02).

Conclusion

In our study, the frequency of IFI, risk factors and mortality rates were found to be similar to the literature. It would be appropriate for each center to evaluate the frequency of IFI and the risk factors that increase it and decide which treatment strategy is more beneficial for their patients.

Keywords:
Allogeneic transplantation, invasive fungal infections, risk factors, mortality markers

INTRODUCTION

Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is a process that involves the infusion of stem cells from the patient (autologous HSCT) or from a human leukocyte antigen (HLA) compatible donor (allogeneic HSCT) following high-dose chemotherapy. It is a treatment method used in the treatment of many hematological, immunological and neoplastic diseases1. After allogeneic HSCT, immunosuppressive agents such as calcineurin inhibitors are taken for a long period of time for the prophylaxis or treatment of graft-versus-host reaction (GVHD)2. For this reason, patients who undergo HSCT are at high risk for serious life-threatening infections3, 4.

The incidence of invasive fungal infections (IFI) is high in patients undergoing allogeneic HSCT, and despite the recent use of new antifungal agents, IFI is an important cause of mortality in these patients. Factors such as the development of aplasia or GVHD after transplantation and the intensive use of immunosuppressive treatments also increase the risk of IFI5, 6. In 2008, the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Invasive Fungal Infections Cooperative Group/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Mycosis Study Group (EORTC/MSG) Consensus group developed criteria for the classification of potential cases according to the probability of IFI, and these were revised in 20207, 8. As the frequency of antifungal prophylaxis increases, the importance of determining the patient group at risk for IFI increases5, 6. Risk factors include the type of disease requiring allogeneic HSCT, type of preparatory regimen, history of previous IFI, presence of HLA compatibility, type and duration of prophylactic antifungal treatment, development and severity of acute or chronic GVHD after allogeneic transplantation, intensive treatment due to GVHD development, and cytomegalovirus (CMV) reaction5, 6, 9-13.

Over the past 20 years, the epidemiology of IFI has changed with the prophylactic use of fluconazole against Candida albicans, and mold infections have become more common14-17.

Changes in transplantation practices, including unrelated or haploidentical donor preferences, conditioning regimens, and strategies for diagnosing and treating IFI, likely influence the epidemiology and outcomes of IFI16-19. Although the frequency and response rates of IFI in allogeneic HSCT vary in the literature, the average frequency has been reported to be 10% to 26% and the mortality rate has been reported to be 40% to 90%, depending on the presence of risk factors6, 18, 20, 21, 22.

The aim of this single-center and retrospective study was to evaluate the frequency, risk factors, clinical picture, treatment and survival of IFI in patients undergoing allogeneic stem cell transplantation.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Patient Selection

All patients hospitalized in the adult hematology clinic of Ege University between 2011 and 2017, who underwent allogeneic stem cell transplantation regardless of indication, who were over 18 years of age and whose data were completely available, were included in the study. Exclusion criteria included transplantation for non-hematological malignancies or solid tumors. Patients who underwent multiple allogeneic HSCT during the study period were evaluated separately at the time of the second or third transplantation. Data were collected independently for each transplantation.

Study Design

A total of 154 patients who met our study criteria were included. All patients’ data were retrospectively scanned from their medical files and the hospital’s digital data system. Collected variables included the subject’s demographic characteristics, underlying disease, transplant characteristics, IFI type, ad outcome.

Underlying disease and transplant characteristics included diagnosis of hematologic malignancy (according to the French-American-British criteria) or type and status of other underlying disease, donor type, HLA compatibility, regimen type (myeloablative, non-myeloablative), age at transplantation, and presence of previous IFI.

Features observed during follow-up of patients who underwent allogeneic transplantation were also recorded. Immunological risk factors (duration of neutropenia, duration of intensive care, presence of acute GVHD, GVHD treatment, CMV response) and features related to IFI (primary and secondary prophylactic antifungal use status, type of antifungal used in prophylaxis, time of onset and duration) were recorded.

EORTC/MSG criteria were used to evaluate the presence of IFI, and blood galactomannan antigen positivity, high-resolution computed tomography findings, pathological evidence, and culture evidence were recorded. The patient group was divided into two. The first group consisted of 75 patients with definite, highly probable, and possible IFI using EORTC/MSG criteria. The definitions for IFI are summarized in Figure 1. Among these patients, there were patients who were started on antifungal treatment due to fever of unknown origin and were included in the probable IFI group. The other group consisted of 79 patients without IFI. All analyses were performed on these two groups. In patients who received IFI treatment, the type of IFI, the day of transplantation on which it developed, empirical treatment status, the type of antifungal drug used in treatment and any changes, the response to IFI after treatment, and the cause of death, if any, were recorded.

The study was carried out after obtaining the necessary permissions from the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of the Ege University Faculty of Medicine (decision no: 17-2/7, date: 13.03.2017).

Statistical Analysis

SPSS computer package program was used for statistical analyses. Data were given as number, percentage, mean and standard deviation. Frequency tables were used when evaluating study data. chi-square test and/or Fisher’s exact test were used in statistical analyses. Wilcoxon W or Mann-Whitney U test was used for comparison of independent means. Significance level was taken as p<0.05.

RESULTS

General Patient Characteristics

A total of 154 patients who underwent allogeneic HSCT were included in the study. The mean age of the patients was 41.87±14.04 years (age range: 18-67), consisting of 92 males (59.7%) and 62 females (40.3%). The duration of hospitalization of the patients ranged from 25 to 195 days (median value: 47 days).

The most common allogeneic HSCT indication was acute myeloid leukemia diagnosis in 58 patients (37.7%). The graft source in all patients was granulocyte colony stimulation factor stimulated peripheral blood. Demographic data and transplantation-related characteristics of the patients (HLA compatibility, donor type, regimen type) are given in Table 1.

Thirty-four of the patients included in the study had acute GVHD. Twenty-nine of these 34 patients were treated with methylprednisolone. Five patients were given multiple treatments and photophoresis was applied after methylprednisolone. After transplantation, CMV-DNA elevation was observed in 46 of 154 patients. While antifungal treatment received due to IFI before transplantation was continued in five patients, 149 patients were given prophylactic antifungal treatment, 20 of which were for secondary prophylaxis (Table 2).

In 75 patients, according to EORTC/MSG criteria, 9 patients were diagnosed with proven IFI, 19 patients with high probability, and 47 patients with possible IFI (Group 1). No IFI findings developed in 79 patients and were included in the group that did not develop IFI (Group 2) (Table 2). In 7 of the 9 patients in the proven IFI group, the source of infection pathogen was isolated. The IFI characteristics of these 9 patients (patients’ culture, pathology, CGA positivity, and CT findings and growth status) are summarized in Table 3.

Of the 75 patients who developed IFI, 26 out of 32 patients whose infection focus could be determined had IFI focus in the lungs, while 5 patients had other organ involvement. Nine of the patients who developed IFI received targeted therapy, 37 received preemptive therapy, and 29 received empirical therapy. The most preferred agent in first-line therapy was liposomal amphotericin-B (L-AmB) 43 (57.3%), followed by caspofungin with 32%. Voriconazole was not preferred in empirical therapy. L-AmB and caspofungin were preferred at approximately the same rates in empirical therapy. Antifungal change was required in 30 patients (40%). The reason for antifungal change in the majority of patients was the lack of fever response. Of the patients who underwent antifungal drug change, 8 (26.6%) were exitus. Of the 10 patients who received dual antifungal therapy, 6 (60%) were exitus. 56 patients (76%) were evaluated as responding to IFI treatment. 18 patients were accepted as exitus due to IFI and related reasons.

Patients who developed and did not develop IFI were divided into Group 1 and Group 2, and possible risk factors and mortality analyses related to IFI development were performed on these two groups. Possible risk factors for IFI and significance rates for IFI development are shown in Table 4. IFI was significantly more common in those who had acute GVHD after transplantation (p=0.035) and in those who had CMV reactivation (p=0.002). In addition, the mean neutropenia duration in Group 1 (IFI development) was 30.89±20.40 (median value: 23.00), while in Group 2 (no IFI), it was 19.98±11.01 (median value: 17.00) (p=0.001).

No significant difference was found between the two groups in terms of disease diagnosis, preparation regimen, donor compatibility, consanguinity status, previous IFI history and IFI development.

12% (n=20) of all patients died. While mortality due to IFI was 24% (n=18) in 75 patients with IFI, mortality was 3% (n=2) in 79 patients without IFI (p=0.001). The mean neutropenia duration of these 18 patients was 34.78±20.06 (median value: 35.00) days, while the duration of neutropenia in the 134 surviving patients was 23.76±16.20 (median value: 19.00) days and was found to be statistically significant (p=0.02).

The prophylactic antifungal duration of these 18 patients was 23.00±17.58 (median value: 23.00). The prophylactic antifungal duration of the surviving 134 of these 152 patients was 31.07±14.52 (median value: 30.00). This was found to be statistically significant (p=0.017).

DISCUSSION

In our study evaluating the frequency, treatment and outcome of IFI developing after allogeneic HSCT, we found that the presence of acute GVHD, use of high-dose corticosteroids (CS) for GVHD, CMV infection and prolonged neutropenia were risk factors for the development of IFI. In addition, the duration of neutropenia was found to be associated with mortality after transplantation.

When we examine the distribution of IFI in our study, we see that the majority of the cases are possible IFI and the fever group of unknown cause. In many studies, only proven and high probability patients were accepted for IFI and the incidence of IFI was seen between 8.8% and 26%6, 13, 18, 20, 23, 24, 25. When we looked at the proven and high probability group among IFI patients in our study, the incidence was seen to be 18.2%, similar to other studies.

The gender distribution, mean age and allogeneic HSCT indication preparation regimens in our study were similar to the literature6, 23, 24, 26. Similar to the literature, the most commonly used prophylactic antifungal was fluconazole27 and the most common focus in the group developing IFI was the lungs25, 28. The most preferred agent in the first-line treatment was L-AmB. In empirical treatment, L-AmB and caspofungin were preferred at approximately the same rates. These treatment options were consistent with the literature29, 30, 31.

In our study, the most frequently isolated agent in patients with proven IFI was aspergillus. Mold species and non-albicans candida species were found to be higher. One of the reasons for this may be the decrease in candida species due to routine prophylaxis with fluconazole. The non-c.albicans increase in recent years is also seen in our center9, 15.

In our study, disease diagnosis, HLA compatibility, donor type, and regimen type were not found to be significant in terms of IFI development. While disease diagnosis and preparation regimen type were not found to be significant in terms of IFI development in studies, there are different results in terms of HLA compatibility and donor type and IFI development in studies6, 23, 25, 32.

A history of previous IFI was not found to be a significant risk factor for the development of IFI, which is inconsistent with the literature6, 23, 24. This may be due to the fact that antifungal treatments were started with a diagnosis of fever of unknown cause and possible IFIs were included in the study.

In an observational study conducted by Shi et al.6, which examined 408 patients who underwent allogeneic HSCT, a history of IFI, HLA incompatibility, prolonged neutropenia duration, and grade 3 and 4 acute GVHD development were found to be associated with the development of IFI. In another study including 1248 patients who underwent allogeneic HSCT, proven and highly probable IFI developed in 163 patients, and HLA incompatibility, duration of neutropenia, and development of GVHD were found to be risk factors for IFI10. In a multicenter study conducted in China, independent risk factors for proven/probable IFI in patients undergoing allogeneic HSCT were identified as diabetes, HLA-matched unrelated donor, prolonged severe neutropenia, and immunosuppressive therapy23. In our study, similar to the literature, the presence of acute GVHD, use of high-dose CS for GVHD, and CMV infection were found to be significant risk factors for the development of IFI6, 10, 11, 20, 23, 24, 28, 33. In addition, prolonged neutropenia was found to be the most important risk factor for the development of IFI in all patient groups.

In our study, it was found that IFI significantly increased transplantation treatment mortality (24% in the IFI group, 2% in the non-IFI group). In the literature, mortality rates related to IFI vary among studies. In a multicenter observational study conducted in China and evaluating 1401 patients who underwent allogeneic HSCT, the mortality rate in patients who developed IFI, similar to our study, was found to be 25%24. In many studies, mortality rates ranged from 40% to 90%21, 22. It was thought that this difference was due to the longer follow-up period in studies with higher mortality rates.

Study Limitations

The limitations of our study were evaluated as its being retrospective, single-centered, the fact that patients were followed up only during hospitalization, and the low number of proven IFIs due to the lack of further examination due to the clinical response obtained after the initiation of empirical antifungal treatment.

CONCLUSION

In our study, the presence of acute GVHD, CMV infection and long duration of neutropenia were found to be risk factors for the development of IFI. In addition, the duration of neutropenia was found to be associated with mortality after allogeneic HSCT. In the prevention and treatment of IFIs, which seriously increase transplantation mortality, it would be appropriate for each center to evaluate the frequency of IFIs, take infection control measures, antifungal prophylaxis and identify patients at high risk of IFIs and decide which treatment strategy is more beneficial.

Ethics

Ethics Committee Approval: The study was carried out after obtaining the necessary permissions from the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of the Ege University Faculty of Medicine (decision no: 17-2/7, date: 13.03.2017).
Informed Consent: Retrospective study.
Footnotes

Authorship Contributions

Concept: E.O., N.S., M.T., F.Ş., G.S., B.A., F.V., Design: B.A., F.V., Data Collection or Processing: E.O., Analysis or Interpretation: E.O., A.G., N.S., M.T., F.Ş., G.S., B.A., F.V., Literature Search: E.O., A.G., F.V., Writing: E.O.
Conflict of Interest: No conflict of interest was declared by the authors.
Financial Disclosure: The authors declared that this study received no financial support.

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