Background:
Infections due to rare molds, such as Fusarium spp., cause severe and difficult-to-control diseases with increasing frequency. Data on fusariosis in children and on the use of voriconazole (VCZ), considered a drug of choice, are scarce in infants and children <2 years of age.
Case Presentation:
We present the first, to our knowledge, pediatric case of disseminated mycosis due to Fusarium musae in a 15-month-old boy with relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia, diagnostics and outcome. Herein, at this severely immunocompromised patient, after prompt diagnosis, disseminated fusariosis was successfully treated with high-dose VCZ at a final dose of 15 mg/kg of body weight twice a day. This occurred by achieving adequate drug exposures as determined by drug susceptibility testing and followed by therapeutic drug monitoring without observed toxicity.
Conclusions:
Appropriate diagnostic approach and timely administration of optimal antifungal therapy with VCZ were important for the successful treatment of disseminated fusariosis. Therapeutic drug monitoring, especially in <2-year-old children, is necessary to achieve sufficient drug exposure for optimal therapeutic response without toxicity.