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Fungal infection and liposomal amphotericin B (AmBisome) therapy in liver transplantation: a 2 year review
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Citations
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References
1999
Year
TransplantationHepatologyMedicineSolid Organ TransplantationTransplantation MedicinePathologyHepatitisClinical MycologyLiver DiseasePresumed AspergillosisLiver TransplantationPharmacologyFungal InfectionNephrologyInvasive Fungal InfectionLiposomal Amphotericin B
We reviewed the use of liposomal amphotericin B in 30 patients receiving therapy following liver transplantation over a 2 year period. Five of these patients were treated for presumed invasive aspergillosis: four of them died despite therapy, each having combined renal and respiratory failure at the time of diagnosis of presumed aspergillosis. Post-mortem examination of three of these patients confirmed the diagnosis of aspergillosis. Twenty-five patients were treated empirically; 11 died and supportive evidence for invasive fungal infection following commencement of therapy was found in only one case. Following liver transplantation, the use of liposomal amphotericin B following confirmation of aspergillus infection or for empirical therapy is of uncertain value, and strategies based on selective prophylaxis for high-risk cases may be preferable.
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