P-1711. Attributable and Contributable Mortalities of Culture-Positive Invasive Aspergillosis in Unselected Patients with Hematologic Malignancies at a Tertiary Care Cancer Center: No Room for Complacency
Ariel D Szvalb, Teny John, Sebastian Wurster, Takahiro Matsuo, Ying Jiang, Dimitrios P Kontoyiannis

TL;DR
This study shows that invasive aspergillosis still causes high mortality in cancer patients with blood disorders, even with modern treatments.
Contribution
The study provides updated mortality rates and risk factors for culture-positive invasive aspergillosis in hematologic malignancy patients.
Findings
Six-week attributable mortality was 18.7% and contributable mortality was 42.7%.
Lack of neutrophil recovery was the only independent risk factor for 6-week attributable mortality.
Culture-positive invasive aspergillosis remains a major cause of death in pretreated lymphoma and multiple myeloma patients.
Abstract
Invasive aspergillosis (IA) remains a common cause of both direct and contributable mortality in patients with hematologic malignancies (HM). Given the advances in antifungal management, it would be important to assess IA-attributable mortality (AM) and contributable mortality (CM), in addition to overall mortality (OM). We retrospectively reviewed the records of 76 consecutive HM patients with proven/probable culture-positive IA (MSG/EORTC criteria) from 2015 to 2021. Death causality was adjudicated based on published criteria. AM was defined as death “due to” IA, while CM as death “due to” and “with” IA. OM encompassed death from any cause. Mortality rates and death causalities were evaluated at 2-, 4-, 6-, and 12-week intervals following IA diagnosis. A multivariate competing risk analysis was performed to identify independent risk factors for 6-week AM, with other death causalities…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntifungal resistance and susceptibility · Fungal Infections and Studies · Ocular Infections and Treatments
