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Risk Factors For Invasive Fungal Infections Complicating Orthotopic Liver Transplantation
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1994
Year
Transplantation SurgeryTransplantationHepatologyFungal PathogenSolid Organ TransplantationClinical EpidemiologyGraft SurvivalCandida SpeciesInfection ControlPublic HealthLiver TransplantationMedicineRisk FactorsEpidemiologyInvasive Fungal Infection
Risk factors for invasive fungal infection in patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation were examined. Thirty-four of 168 transplants were complicated within 100 days after transplantation by documented invasive fungal infection (Candida species, 28 patients; mycelial fungi, 5; both Candida and Aspergillus species, 1). In the multivariate Cox proportional hazards model, three baseline and two posttransplant variables were independently significant risk factors for infection: level of creatinine (hazard ratio = 1.4), length of transplant operation (HR = 1.2), retransplantation (HR = 3.2), abdominal or intrathoracic reoperations (HR = 2.5), and cytomegalovirus infection (HR = 8.5). Four predictors (creatinine of >3.0 mg/dl., operative time of > 11 h, retransplantation, and early colonization) assessable at the time of transplantation or shortly thereafter were incorporated into a simple predictive model for risk stratification. The risk of invasive fungal infection ranged from 1% in patients with no predictors to 67% in patients with two or more predictors. Strategies to prevent invasive fungal infections after liver transplantation should be targeted to these high-risk groups.