Pulmonary Candidiasis in Patients with Cancer: An Autopsy Study
Clinical Infectious Diseases2002Vol. 34(3), pp. 400–403
Citations Over TimeTop 16% of 2002 papers
Dimitrios P. Kontoyiannis, B. T. Reddy, Harrys A. Torres, Mario A. Luna, Russell E. Lewis, Jeffery Tarrand, G. P. Bodey, Issam Raad
Abstract
For patients who had cancer and autopsy-proven pneumonia, we evaluated whether cultures of respiratory secretions (sputum and/or bronchoalveolar lavage) performed < or =4 weeks before autopsy were a reliable basis for the diagnosis of pulmonary candidiasis. Pulmonary candidiasis was identified at autopsy in 36 patients, but common clinical predictors were insensitive for this diagnosis. For sputum culture, the sensitivity, specificity, and the positive and negative predictive values were 85%, 60%, 42%, and 93%, respectively; for bronchoalveolar lavage culture, these values were 71%, 57%, 29%, and 89%, respectively.
Related Papers
- → Interleucinas na encefalopatia hipóxico-isquêmica(2003)14 cited
- Susquehanna Chorale Spring Concert "Roots and Wings"(2017)
- → Genentech taps Affimed’s antibodies(2018)
- Enxerto livre de arteria epigastrica inferior: avaliacao hemodinamica e angiografica pre e pos-operatoria(1988)
- → KOMPLIKASI REGIONAL ANESTESI PADA PEDIATRIK(2023)