Title | Transmission of invasive aspergillosis from a subclinically infected donor to three different organ transplant recipients |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 1996 |
Authors | Keating MR, Guerrero MA, Daly RC, Walker RC, Davies SF |
Journal | Chest |
Volume | 109 |
Issue | 4 |
Pagination | 1119 - 24 |
Date Published | Apr |
ISSN | 0012-3692 (Print) 0012-3692 (Linking) |
Accession Number | 8635345 |
Keywords | *Aspergillus fumigatus / isolation & purification, *Tissue Donors, Abscess / microbiology, Adult, Aspergillosis / *transmission, Dermatomycoses / pathology, Endocarditis / microbiology, Eye Infections, Fungal / pathology, Female, Heart Transplantation / *adverse effects, Humans, Kidney Diseases / microbiology, Kidney Transplantation / *adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Opportunistic Infections / microbiology / *transmission, Transplantation, Homologous |
Abstract | OBJECTIVE: To describe a cluster of donor-transmitted cases of invasive aspergillosis. DESIGN: Case series of epidemiologically linked cases of invasive aspergillosis. SETTING: Two tertiary care centers with solid-organ transplant programs. PATIENTS: Two kidney recipients, one heart recipient, and the single donor. MEASUREMENTS: Routine clinical, microbiological, and pathologic investigation as dictated for patient care. Epidemiologic analysis to establish linkage among cases. RESULTS: Three allografts (two kidneys and a heart) from a single donor transmitted invasive aspergillosis to the recipients. Three weeks after transplantation, the two kidney recipients had fever and urine cultures positive for Aspergillus fumigatus. The infected kidneys had multiple Aspergillus abscesses and had to be removed to cure the patients. The heart recipient had a negative workup when a diagnosis of aspergillosis was made for the kidney recipients but presented three months later with aspergillus endocarditis with hematogenous spread to the eyes and to the skin. Treatment included eye surgery, aortic valve replacement, and antifungal therapy; control of infection ensued. The donor was intensely immunosuppressed (17 days post-liver transplantation with death from intracerebral bleeding) but had no clinical or autopsy evidence of aspergillosis. Donor tracheal secretions obtained at the time of organ harvest later grew A fumigatus. CONCLUSION: Expanded criteria for organ donation have to be balanced against infectious risk to organ recipients. A fumigatus can be transmitted from a subclinically infected donor to solid-organ transplant recipients. |
Short Title | Transmission of invasive aspergillosis from a subclinically infected donor to three different organ transplant recipients |
Notify Library Reference ID | 782 |
Transmission of invasive aspergillosis from a subclinically infected donor to three different organ transplant recipients
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