Journal of Diagnostics Concepts & Practice ›› 2024, Vol. 23 ›› Issue (05): 494-499.doi: 10.16150/j.1671-2870.2024.05.005

• Original articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Analysis of chest CT findings, diagnosis, and treatment of mucormycosis infection in 65 hematologic disease patients

LI Ying1,2(), JIANG Han1,2, WANG Xiaoxue1,2, WEI Haonan1,2   

  1. 1 Department of radiology,State Key Laboratory of Experimental Hematology, National Clinical Research Center for Blood Diseases, Haihe Laboratory of Cell Ecosystem, Institute of Hematology & Blood Diseases Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Tianjin 300020, China
    2 Tianjin Institutes of Health Science,Tianjin 301600, China
  • Received:2024-03-20 Accepted:2024-08-08 Online:2024-10-25 Published:2025-02-25
  • Contact: LI Ying E-mail:liying@ihcams.ac.cn

Abstract:

Objective This study aims to analyze the clinical diagnosis and treatment characteristics of hematologic diseases combined with mucormycosis for clinical reference. Methods A total of 65 consecutive cases of hematologic diseases combined with mucormycosis, clinically diagnosed at our hospital from October 2018 to December 2023, were included. All patients underwent chest CT examination, and 14 of them underwent cranial MRI examination. Eight patients underwent lung tissue biopsy, and 57 underwent blood, alveolar lavage fluid, or tissue metagenomic next-generation sequencing. The CT findings were analyzed and the diagnostic process was summarized. Results Pulmonary mucormycosis accounted for 5.30% (65/1 233 cases) of all fungal infections diagnosed in our hospital during the same period. Among these patients, 58 had pulmonary mucormycosis, and 7 had disseminated mucormycosis involving multiple organs. Chest CT of patients with pulmonary mucormycosis showed single patchy consolidation (23/65), multiple nodules (28/65), mixed nodules (11/65), or diffuse exudation (3/65) in the lungs, with 29 cases showing reverse halo sign, 25 cases showing halo sign, 20 cases with pleural effusion, 11 cases with more than 10 nodules, and 2 cases with vessel truncation sign on enhanced CT examination. In patients with disseminated mucormycosis, there were 7 cases of multiple nodules in the lung, 6 cases of single or multiple nodules in the brain, 1 case of diffuse infarction in the brain, and 2 cases of nodules in the spleen and kidney. The average time from the first chest CT to clinical diagnosis was (4.3±1.8) days. After CT suspected fungal infection, blood or tissue and alveolar second-generation sequencing were performed. After antifungal treatment, such as amphotericin B, 58 patients improved, 2 patients underwent surgical resection of lung tissue, 2 patients were lost to follow-up after their families decided to stop treatment, and 3 patients died. Conclusions Pulmonary mucormycosis accounts for about 5% of fungal infections in hospitalized patients with hematological diseases. Chest CT mainly shows single large consolidation and multiple nodules, with 45% showing reverse halo sign and 38.5% showing halo sign. These signs can provide reference for diagnosis, and second-generation sequencing plays an important role in clinical diagnosis.

Key words: Hematologic diseases, Mucormycosis, Computed tomography

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