Yarrowia lipolytica is weakly pathogenic yeast, which is rarely isolated from the blood. We report unusual cases of Y. lipolytica fungemia occurred between October 2012 and June 2014 in the intensive care unit (ICU) of the UH Habib Bourguiba Sfax. During this period, 55 cases of Y. lipolytica septicemia were diagnosed. There were 44 men and 11 women (sex ratio = 4).The median age was 43 years. The broad-spectrum antibiotics (100 %), the catheterization (96 %), and the prolonged hospitalization in ICU (91 %) were the main risk factors. Patients were hospitalized in ICU, mostly, for polytraumatism (45.4 %), pneumopathy (9 %), and post-operative complications (7 %). Fever unresponsive to broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy was the predominant sign of infection (83.6 %). Y. lipolytica was isolated in one or several blood cultures (14.5 %) and in the catheter tip culture of nine patients (16.3 %).Treatment was based on intravenous amphotericin B (58.2 %), fluconazole (45.4 %) and/or removal catheter (69 %). Apyrexia or blood cultures sterilization was obtained for 34 patients (61.8 %). Y. lipolytica candidemia is an opportunistic and emerging human yeast pathogen. It can reach to the bloodstream of immunocompromised or critically ill patients during hospitalization through intravascular catheterization. Further clinical data need to be evaluated for formulating management strategies of seriously ill patients infected with uncommon fungal agents.
Geotrichum capitatum is an uncommon cause of invasive infections in immunocompromised patients, particularly those with hematological malignancies and severe neutropenia. The aim of this study was to report the cases of invasive geotrichosis in our hospital. It is a retrospective study of invasive geotrichosis diagnosed in the Laboratory of Parasitology-Mycology of the UH Habib Bourguiba, Sfax, from January 2005 to August 2013. Six cases of invasive Geotrichum infections were diagnosed. There were three men and three women. The mean age was 35 years. Five patients have acute myeloid leukemia with a profound neutropenia, and one patient was hospitalized in the intensive care unit for polytraumatism. Clinically, the prolonged fever associated with pulmonary symptoms was the predominant symptom (n = 5). Geotrichum capitatum was isolated in one or more blood culture. Two patients had urinary tract infections documented by multiple urine cultures positive for G. capitatum. Five patients received conventional amphotericin B alone or associated with voriconazole. The outcome was fatal in four cases. Invasive geotrichosis is rare, but particularly fatal in immunocompromised patients. Approximately, 186 cases have been reported in the literature. The prognostic is poor with mortality over 50 %. So, early diagnosis and appropriate management are necessary to improve prognosis.
Research and development (R&D) investments reduce current-period earnings while the benefits associated with the investments occur in the future. This problem implies an earnings management tool to boost short-term performance. While there is much evidence regarding managerial discretion through R&D capitalization, empirical studies that directly examine managerial discretion through R&D expenditure adjusting have not been widely provided in the European context. This paper seeks to determine if earnings targets influence R&D investment by encouraging R&D cuts after IFRS adoption. Focusing on a French setting, where companies invest heavily in R&D, results show that managers tend to cut the R&D expenditures in order to achieve earnings target. Studying two earnings management incentives: avoidance of losses (positive earnings target) and earnings decreases (positive earning growths target), findings support thresholds assumption and provide evidence on real earnings management through R&D expensing. This empirical research contributes to the literature by providing further evidence that post-FRS, R&D cut is a strategic decision influenced by earnings management to boost performance.
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