Candida Esophagitis in Patients with Solid Organ Cancers
Ahmed Telbany, Hannah Farfour, Krista Gomez, Youssef Soliman, Toufic A. Kachaamy

TL;DR
Candida esophagitis is a growing concern in cancer patients due to weakened immunity and treatment side effects, requiring early detection and proper treatment to avoid complications.
Contribution
This paper provides a comprehensive review of Candida esophagitis in solid organ cancer patients, highlighting gaps in diagnostics and treatment strategies.
Findings
Cancer patients receiving chemotherapy and immunosuppressive drugs are at higher risk for Candida esophagitis.
Fluconazole is effective as first-line treatment, while echinocandins and posaconazole are used for resistant cases.
Early recognition and treatment improve outcomes and continuity of cancer care.
Abstract
Candida esophagitis (CE) is the most common fungal infection of the esophagus and an increasingly recognized complication in patients with solid organ malignancies. Once primarily associated with advanced HIV/AIDS and hematologic malignancies, the epidemiology has shifted in the modern era of antiretroviral therapy and intensive cancer treatments. Patients with solid tumors receiving chemotherapy, corticosteroids, broad-spectrum antibiotics, and proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are at a heightened risk for CE due to synergistic immunosuppressive and mucosal barrier-disrupting effects. Clinically, CE in cancer patients often present with odynophagia, dysphagia, or chest pain, but a considerable proportion of cases are asymptomatic or non-specific, complicating diagnosis and needing a high index of suspicion. Endoscopic evaluation with characteristic white plaques and histopathologic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntifungal resistance and susceptibility · Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research · Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia detection and treatment
