Purpose of Review This review highlights the epidemiology, diagnosis, and clinical manifestations of histoplasmosis. Recent Findings There is an increasing awareness of histoplasmosis in Central and South America in patients with human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS), and deaths from histoplasmosis in this region may outnumber deaths from tuberculosis. Diagnosis in this region is hampered by lack of rapid diagnostic tests. Growth of H. capsulatum in culture is definitive, but takes weeks. In areas in which antigen testing is available, this has become an important rapid diagnostic tool, and methods combining antigen and antibody testing appear to improve diagnostic accuracy for acute pulmonary and central nervous system histoplasmosis. Pulmonary histoplasmosis, although usually self-limited, rarely can lead to life-threatening complications. Uncommon, but serious and sometimes fatal complications of disseminated histoplasmosis include Addison's disease, meningitis, culture-negative endocarditis, and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. Summary The use of antigen testing has improved our ability to diagnose histoplasmosis, but these tests are not universally available. Complications of both pulmonary and disseminated histoplasmosis remain challenging.
Background: Few options are available for cytomegalovirus (CMV) treatment in transplant recipients resistant, refractory, or intolerant to approved agents. Letermovir (LET) is approved for prophylaxis in hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) recipients, but little is known about efficacy in CMV infection. We conducted an observational study to determine the patterns of use and outcome of LET treatment of CMV infection in transplant recipients.Methods: Patients who received LET for treatment of CMV infection were identified at 13 transplant centers. Demographic and outcome data were collected.Results: Twenty-seven solid organ and 21 HCT recipients (one dual) from 13 medical centers were included. Forty-five of 47 (94%) were treated with other agents prior to LET, and 57% had a history of prior CMV disease. Seventy-seven percent were intolerant to other antivirals; 32% were started on LET because of resistance concerns. Among 37 patients with viral load < 1000 international units (IU)/ml at LET initiation, two experienced >1 log rise in viral load by week 12, and no deaths were attributed to
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The diagnosis of blastomycosis and histoplasmosis can be difficult for clinicians who rarely see infections caused by these environmentally restricted dimorphic fungi. Historically, the diagnosis of blastomycosis has been established by culture and sometimes by histopathologic identification. Currently, antigen detection in urine and serum has been shown to aid in the rapid diagnosis of blastomycosis, and newer antibody assays are likely to contribute to our diagnostic capability in the near future. The gold standard for the diagnosis of histoplasmosis has been culture of the organism from involved tissues, aided in some patients by histopathological verification of the typical yeast forms in tissues. Antigen detection has contributed greatly to the ability of clinicians to rapidly establish the diagnosis of histoplasmosis, especially in severely ill and immunocompromised patients, and antibody testing for Histoplasma capsulatum provides important adjunctive diagnostic capability for several forms of both acute and chronic histoplasmosis. For both of these endemic mycoses, novel molecular tests are under active investigation, but remain available in only a few reference laboratories. In this review, we provide a synopsis of diagnostic test options that aid in establishing whether a patient has blastomycosis or histoplasmosis.
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