Abstract

Forty patients with acute leukemia (age 16-71 years, 13 females, 27 males) with induced neutropenia due to chemotherapy received either 50 mg fluconazole or 800 mg amphotericin B per day orally as prophylaxis against fungal infection. Nasal and genital swabs, mouth washings, urine, stool and blood serum were taken for mycological and serological examination before and weekly during one episode of neutropenia (less than 10(9) granulocytes/l) per patient. The quantitative determination of the yeast concentration in stool specimens demonstrated that amphotericin B led to intestinal yeast count reduction in only one third of the patients and could not prevent the increase of the intestinal yeast flora in another third of the patients. Beyond that the quantitative determination of yeast colonization in oropharynx, genital region, blood and stool did not prove to be a reliable tool for evaluating the host-fungus relationship during neutropenia. On the other hand mycoserology reflected episodes of candidosis well. 19 patients treated with fluconazole showed only minor titer increases. In 21 patients treated with amphotericin B, four fungemias were found: two by both hemagglutination (HAT) and immunofluorescence (IFT), one by IFT and one by antigen detection (Ramco Cand-Tec) alone. In only one of these cases yeast cells were released in urine. From these results is concluded that control of serology is essential in studies of that type and that fluconazole seems to provide better protection from candidosis than amphotericin B during induced neutropenia.

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