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Research Article

Cryptococcal meningitis in non-HIV-infected patients in a Chinese tertiary care hospital, 1997–2007

, , , , &
Pages 570-579 | Received 19 May 2009, Accepted 25 Oct 2009, Published online: 14 Apr 2010
 

Abstract

Information remains sparse about non-HIV patients with cryptococcal meningitis in the era of triazole therapy. Particularly of interest are the clinical manifestations and prognosis of the infection in these previously healthy patients. We retrospectively reviewed 154 non-HIV-infected patients with cryptococcal meningitis who presented in our hospital from 1997 to 2007. We compared the clinical features and outcomes between predisposed and otherwise healthy hosts. The number of cases per year showed a steady increase over time. The majority of patients were otherwise apparently healthy (103 patients, 66.9%) and predisposing factors were identified in only 51 (33.1%) patients. Corticosteroid medication accounted for the most common underlying factor in these cases (n = 21). Morbidity was appallingly high, with seizures in 28.6%, cranial nerves palsies in 51.5% and cerebral herniation in 19.5%. Despite these complications, overall mortality during 1 year was 28.7% (41/143), close to that reported from other centers with non-HIV patients. Death attributed to cryptococcosis occurred in 19.6% (28/143) patients with most receiving amphotericin B as a component of their initial therapy. Among surviving patients who had lumbar punctures at weeks 2 and 10, those given amphotericin B for initial therapy achieved higher rates of overall response than those receiving initial fluconazole therapy at either week 2 (84.4% of 96 patients vs. 33.3% of 24 patients, P <0.001) or week 10 (85.0% of 93 patients vs. 66.7% of 24 patients, P = 0.041). In multivariate analysis, coma, cerebral herniation, and initial antifungal therapy without amphotericin B were independently correlated with both increased overall and attributable mortality, while advanced age (≥ 60 years) was correlated with increased overall mortality only. Patients with apparently normal immune status were overall younger than those who were immunocompromised. In addition, previously healthy patients for whom diagnosis was delayed had more severe disease, experiencing more brain herniation, coma, seizures, hydrocephalus and more surgical shunt procedures. On the other hand, immunocompromised patients were more commonly found to have high fever and brain parenchymal involvement. However, both groups had a similar treatment response and 1-year survival.

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr. John Bennett for his critical review and valuable suggestions about this manuscript.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest.

This paper was first published online on Early Online on 15 April 2010.

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