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Native Valve Endocarditis due to<i>Candida glabrata</i>Treated without Valvular Replacement: A Potential Role for Caspofungin in the Induction and Maintenance Treatment
41
Citations
10
References
2004
Year
Conventional Antifungal TherapyCandida EndocarditisHeart FailureAntifungal AgentNative Valve EndocarditisAntifungal AgentsMaintenance TreatmentPharmacologyMedicinal FungiFungal EndocarditisClinical MycologyValvular Heart DiseaseMedicineCardiologyFungal PathogenValvular Replacement
Conventional antifungal therapy for fungal endocarditis has been associated with a poor cure rate. Therefore, combined medical and surgical therapy has been recommended. However, new potent antifungal agents, such as echinocandins, could increase the medical options and, in some cases, avoid the need for surgery. We report a case of Candida endocarditis treated successfully without valve replacement with intravenous liposomal amphotericin B (total dose, 4 g) and intravenous caspofungin (a 100-mg loading dose followed by 50 mg per day for 8 weeks) as induction therapy and intravenous caspofungin (100 mg 3 times per week for 12 weeks) as maintenance therapy.
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