Twenty-one episodes of fungal peritonitis occurred over 35 months among 290 patients on CAPD, accounting for 6.3% of all peritonitis episodes. Patients with more frequent bacterial peritonitis were at higher risk of developing fungal peritonitis, and 28.6% of cases followed antimicrobial therapy. Candida species accounted for 85.7% of cases. Oral fluconazole was used as initial therapy in all patients, which was followed by catheter removal if peritonitis failed to improve. The cure rate with fluconazole therapy alone without catheter removal was 9.5%. Fluconazole plus catheter removal, the latter necessitated in 85.7% of cases, resulted in a cure rate of 66.7%. The remaining 3 (14.3%) patients responded to intravenous amphotericin given as salvage therapy. Disease-related mortality was 14.3%. Reinsertion of dialysis catheter was attempted in 15 patients and CAPD was successfully resumed in 13 (86.7%). We conclude that oral fluconazole can be safely used as initial therapy in patients with fungal peritonitis complicating CAPD. Although catheter removal was necessary in the majority of patients, this sequential approach resulted in a relatively low prevalence of peritoneal adhesions and subsequent CAPD failure.
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