Introduction of Fungal Pneumonia
Fungal pneumonia or invasive fungal pulmonary infection is often life-threatening, especially in immunocompromised patients, such as those with cancer, undergoing chemotherapy, or with HIV/AIDS. pulmonary inflammation caused by inhaled fungal spores or hematogenous fungal spread, leading to pneumonia-like illness.
Common Fungi Causing Pulmonary Infections:
| Fungal Pathogen | Key Features | Common in |
|---|---|---|
| Aspergillus spp. | Acute angle branching septate hyphae | Cancer, transplant, ICU |
| Cryptococcus neoformans/gattii | Encapsulated yeast | HIV/AIDS, malignancy |
| Pneumocystis jirovecii | Non-cultivable, alveolar foamy exudate | AIDS (CD4 <200) |
| Histoplasma capsulatum | Intracellular yeast (in macrophages) | Endemic areas (e.g., India, USA) |
| Blastomyces dermatitidis | Broad-based budding yeast | Rare, endemic |
| Coccidioides spp. | Spherules with endospores | Desert regions (e.g., Arizona, Africa) |
| Mucorales (e.g., Rhizopus) | Broad aseptate hyphae | Diabetic ketoacidosis, cancer |
Clinical Features
- Fever, cough, hemoptysis
- Chest pain, dyspnea
- Unresolving pneumonia despite antibiotics
- Rapid clinical deterioration in neutropenic or critically ill patients
Laboratory and Diagnostic Tests:
| Test | Utility |
|---|---|
| KOH Mount | Rapid screening (e.g., septate hyphae or yeast) |
| LPCB/Calcofluor white stain | Detailed fungal morphology |
| Culture (SDA, Mycosel) | Identification of fungal pathogen |
| CrAg (serum/CSF) | Cryptococcal antigen detection |
| Galactomannan assay | Invasive aspergillosis |
| β-D-glucan test | General fungal infection marker |
| BAL or lung biopsy | Definitive diagnosis in deep infections |
| CT Chest | Halo sign, air crescent (esp. in Aspergillus) |
Treatment (based on pathogen)
| Fungus | Drug of Choice |
|---|---|
| Aspergillus | Voriconazole / Isavuconazole |
| Cryptococcus | Amphotericin B + Flucytosine (induction), then Fluconazole |
| Pneumocystis jirovecii | Cotrimoxazole (TMP-SMX) |
| Mucormycosis | Liposomal Amphotericin B |
| Histoplasma / Blastomyces | Itraconazole / Amphotericin B (severe) |
Prevention
- HEPA filters in oncology wards
- Prophylactic antifungals (e.g., posaconazole) in neutropenic patients
- Early screening in symptomatic cancer patients
Keynotes on Fungal Pneumonia
- Fungal pneumonia primarily affects immunocompromised patients, such as those with cancer, HIV, or post-transplant status.
- Although rare in healthy hosts, fungal pneumonia becomes life-threatening in neutropenic or severely immunosuppressed individuals.
- Common pathogens include Aspergillus spp., Cryptococcus neoformans, Pneumocystis jirovecii, and Mucorales species.
- Patients often present with fever, non-resolving cough, hemoptysis, and chest pain despite broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy.
- Radiological signs like the halo sign or air crescent on CT suggest invasive aspergillosis.
- KOH mount and calcofluor white stain rapidly detect fungal hyphae or yeast cells in clinical specimens.
- Fungal cultures on SDA or Mycosel media help confirm species. Although they require time and expertise.
- Cryptococcus appears as an encapsulated yeast with a halo, best visualized using India Ink preparation.
- Pneumocystis jirovecii causes bilateral ground-glass opacities and foamy alveolar exudates, especially in HIV/AIDS.
- Galactomannan and β-D-glucan assays assist in the early diagnosis of invasive fungal infections.
- Serum or CSF cryptococcal antigen (CrAg) test detects Cryptococcus with high sensitivity and specificity.
- Liposomal amphotericin B, voriconazole, fluconazole, and cotrimoxazole remain the mainstays of treatment.
- Prompt initiation of antifungals significantly improves prognosis. It reduces mortality in invasive fungal pneumonia.
- Delayed diagnosis often results in disseminated disease, CNS involvement, or multi-organ failure.
- Risk factors include corticosteroids, prolonged neutropenia, broad-spectrum antibiotic use, and ICU stays.
- Air filtration with HEPA and antifungal prophylaxis helps prevent infection in high-risk hospital units.
- BAL or lung biopsy remains the gold standard for diagnosis when imaging and sputum tests are inconclusive.
- Mucormycosis requires urgent surgical debridement along with high-dose amphotericin B therapy.
- Mixed infections with bacteria or other fungi complicate diagnosis and treatment in oncology patients.
- Clinicians must maintain a high suspicion for fungal pneumonia in case antibiotics fail to resolve lung infiltrates.
Further Readings
- https://www.verywellhealth.com/fungal-pneumonia-5179190
- https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/4471-pneumonia
- https://journal.chestnet.org/article/S0012-3692(23)05558-7/abstract
- https://publications.ersnet.org/content/erj/64/5/2400803
- https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9106206/
- https://radiopaedia.org/articles/pulmonary-fungal-disease
- https://journals.lww.com/ascp/fulltext/2015/03020/fungal_pneumonia_in_intensive_care_unit__when_to.4.aspx
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/fungal-pneumonia
- https://www.thoracic.org/statements/resources/tb-opi/treatment-of-fungal-infections-in-adult-pulmonary-critical-care-and-sleep-medicine.pdf
