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An Approach to Fulminant Invasive Fungal Rhinosinusitis in the Immunocompromised Host
M. Boyd Gillespie, MD;
Bert W. O'Malley, Jr, MD;
Howard W. Francis, MD
Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1998;124:520-526.
Objective To examine the pathogenesis of fulminant invasive fungal rhinosinusitis to determine factors that may affect patient survival.
Methods Retrospective chart review of 25 patients treated for invasive fungal rhinosinusitis over a 10-year period at an academic tertiary referral center. Evaluation of the medical and surgical records, radiographic studies, surgical pathology specimens, and culture results allowed for a multifactorial comparison between survivors and nonsurvivors. Survivors were patients who left the hospital with the invasive fungal disease stable or cured.
Results Fungal invasion often occurs within the nasal cavity (92% of patients), most commonly at the middle turbinate (62% of patients receiving biopsy). Survivors had complete surgical resection more often than nonsurvivors (90% vs 0%), and were more likely to respond to granulocyte colonystimulating factor than nonsurvivors (100% vs 0% of those treated).
Conclusions Rigid nasal endoscopy with frozen section biopsy of suspicious nasal lesions and high-incidence areas (ie, middle turbinate) allows for the timely diagnosis of invasive fungal rhinosinusitis. Survival improves if the disease is limited to the nasal or sinus cavities, which may represent an earlier stage of disease. Favorable prognostic signs include the ability to achieve a complete surgical resection and a positive response to granulocyte colonystimulating factor in the neutropenic patient.
From the Department of OtolaryngologyHead and Neck Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md.
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