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- Guest speaker Dr Dora Corzo-Leon
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Mucorales
- Mucorales is a large group (’order’) of ubiquitous, environmental moulds that cause the devastating invasive fungal infection, mucormycosis
- Mucormycosis is a rapidly progressive infection, characterised by angioinvasion and tissue necrosis - it is the most acute and fulminant fungal infection known
- Due to limited diagnostics and treatment options, mortality exceeds 50%
- WHO high-priority fungal pathogen
Taxonomy
- The pathogenic moulds that cause mucormycosis are in the fungal order Mucorales and the fungal kingdom Mucormycota
- Diverse group consisting of different genera - the most common causative species include:
- Rhizopus arrhizus var*. arrhizus (syn R. oryzae), R. arrhizus* var. delemar, R. microsporus
- Rhizomucor pusillus
- Cunninghamella bertholletiae
- Apophysomyces variabilis
- Saksenaea vasiformis
- *Lichtheimia (*ex-Absidia) corymbifera, L. rasmosa
- Mucor circinelloides, M. velutinosus
- Syncephalastrum recemosum
- Actinomucor elegans
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Nomenclature is tricky and confusing - time to be de-mythed:
- The disease mucormycosis as often mistakenly referred to as “black fungus” - these fungi are not black - they have clear hyphae - but cause invasive disease with black, necrotic tissue if affecting the skin or sinuses
- The fungal kingdom ‘Mucormycota’ used to be called ‘Zygomycota’ → mucormycosis is still commonly called ‘zygomycosis’
- The group of fungi that cause mucormycosis are often mistakenly referred to as ‘Mucor’ - this is only one of the many genera of fungi that cause mucormycosis - the correct term is ‘Mucorales’ or mucoraceous moulds
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Epidemiology
- Mucorales are ubiquitous environmental fungi - found worldwide, commonly on decaying organic matter - fungal spores are small and easily aerosolised and dispersed
- Cause invasive, opportunistic infection immunocompromised patients when spores are inhaled, inoculated or ingested from the environment
- Invasive disease may also occur in previously immunocompetent individuals in the context of burns / trauma
- Global and national incidence rates are relatively unknown - lack of surveillance of invasive fungal infections
- Trends over the last 10 years show a rising incidence
Clinical
| Site | Rhino-orbito-cerebral > Pulmonary > Cutaneous > Gastrointestinal
Disseminates in approximately 25% (usually by contiguous spread) |
| --- | --- |
| Risk Factors | Haemopoietic / solid organ transplant
Haematological malignancy
Prolonged neutropenia
Poorly controlled diabetes mellitus
Prolonged corticosteroid use
Desferrioxamine therapy
Iron overload states
Trauma / burns
COVID-19 infection → >47,000 cases of COVID-19 associated mucormycosis in India 2021 |
| Pathogenesis | (i) Fungal spores are inhaled / inoculated into skin abrasions / ingested
(ii) Immunocompetent host: spores are phagocytosed (macrophages and neutrophils)
(iii) Defects in cellular immunity / immune system overwhelmed → spores germinate → hyphae invade tissues → angioinvasion → hyphae grow along blood vessel → thrombosis, tissue infarction and necrosis
These fungi grow rapidly → rapid disease progression
Fungal growth is further favoured by hyperglycaemia, acidosis, iron overload states |
| Clinical syndromes | Rhino-orbital-cerebral disease
- Most commonly seen in diabetic patients (especially with ketoacidosis)
- Follows inhalation of spores into the sinuses
- Characterised by infarction of tissues of the nasopharynx and orbit - direct invasion of the CNS may occur
- Symptoms: facial and / or eye pain, black eschar on nasal mucosa / palate, orbital cellulitis, proptosis, conjunctival swelling, cranial nerve defects, retinal artery thrombosis and visual impairment
Pulmonary disease
- Occurs most frequently in neutropenic patients
- Symptoms: initially non-specific with fever, breathlessness and cough → progresses to haemoptysis and severe haemorrhage pulmonary vascular invasion and infarction occurs
- Radiological findings: segmental consolidation, occasional cavitation
Cutaneous
- Initial inoculation is associated with trauma, burns, insect bites - outbreaks have been associated with non-sterile dressings
- Necrotic lesions develop following vascular invasion and progressively extend to involve deeper tissues penetration if not recognised.
Gastrointestinal
- Rare - associated with severe malnutrition, particularly children, and GI diseases that disrupt the GI mucosa - occurs following ingestion of fungal elements
- Clinical picture mimics intra-abdominal abscess - abdominal pain, fever, nausea, vomiting
- Rapidly fatal - usually diagnosed at autopsy
Other:
- Endocarditis, osteomyelitis, renal infection, allergic sinusitis |