ESCMID* guideline for the diagnosis and management of Candida diseases 2012: patients with HIV infection or AIDS.


Autoria(s): Lortholary O.; Petrikkos G.; Akova M.; Arendrup M.C.; Arikan-Akdagli S.; Bassetti M.; Bille J.; Calandra T.; Castagnola E.; Cornely O.A.; Cuenca-Estrella M.; Donnelly J.P.; Garbino J.; Groll A.H.; Herbrecht R.; Hope W.W.; Jensen H.E.; Kullberg B.J.; Lass-Flörl C.; Meersseman W.; Richardson M.D.; Roilides E.; Verweij P.E.; Viscoli C.; Ullmann A.J.; ESCMID Fungal Infection Study Group
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

Mucosal candidiasis is frequent in immunocompromised HIV-infected highly active antiretroviral (HAART) naive patients or those who have failed therapy. Mucosal candidiasis is a marker of progressive immune deficiency. Because of the frequently marked and prompt immune reconstitution induced by HAART, there is no recommendation for primary antifungal prophylaxis of mucosal candidiasis in the HIV setting in Europe, although it has been evidenced as effective in the pre-HAART era. Fluconazole remains the first line of therapy for both oropharyngeal candidiasis and oesophageal candidiasis and should be preferred to itraconazole oral solution (or capsules when not available) due to fewer side effects. For patients who still present with fluconazole-refractory mucosal candidiasis, oral treatment with any other azole should be preferred based on precise Candida species identification and susceptibility testing results in addition to the optimization of HAART when feasible. For vaginal candidiasis, topical therapy is preferred.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_B23415647269

isbn:1469-0691 (Electronic)

pmid:23137138

doi:10.1111/1469-0691.12042

isiid:000310875600006

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Clinical Microbiology and Infection, vol. 18, no. Suppl. 7, pp. 68-77

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/review

article