We present the results of a prospective multicenter study of risk factors, etiology, clinical features, and treatment outcomes for mucormycosis in patients with COVID-19 (COVID-M) in the Russian Federation.The study included 60 adult patients with COVID-M. To analyze risk factors for COVID-M, we conducted a case-control study. The control group included 60 adult patients with COVID-19 without mucormycosis. To analyze the clinical manifestations of COVID-M, we created a control group of hematological patients with mucormycosis examined in 2011–2020.In patients with COVID-19, the risk of developing mucormycosis was significantly increased with diabetes mellitus (OR=49) and overweight (OR=4,75), as well as with the use of high (≥100 mg per day for prednisolone) doses of glucocorticosteroids (OR= 4,762), especially ≥10 days (OR=25,4). The main localization of mucormycosis in patients with COVID-19 was the paranasal sinuses (95%) and the orbit (68%). Involvement of ≥2 organs was identified in 70% of patients. The main causative agents of mucormycosis were Rhizopus arrhizus (43%) and unidentified mucormycetes (36%).90-days overall survival of patients with mucormycosis and COVID-19 – 71%. The stay in the ICU (p=0,01), the use of mechanical ventilation (p=0,0481), the presence of CVC (p=0,049), CNS damage (p=0,016) and ≥ 2 organs (p=0,048) significantly worsened the prognosis of the disease. The best prognosis was in patients who received antifungal therapy (p=0,03875) and surgical treatment (p=0,046).
Mucormycosis is one of the most aggressive invasive mycoses. The mortality rate of patients with mucormycosis, depending on clinical form and background disease, varies from 30% to 100%. This article provides the first description of mucormycosis in Russia after infection caused by SARS-CoV-2, as well as a review of literature reports on mucormycosis in patients with COVID-19 (as of September 2021).
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