Abstract

The distribution of infection by Histoplasma capsulatum in Brazil is heterogeneous, and the number of cases affecting immunocompetent individuals is relatively small. This study reports the epidemiological and clinical data regarding histoplasmosis in non-immunosuppressed individuals. The study included only the immunocompetent patients with histoplasmosis who were diagnosed between 1970 and 2012 at a university hospital located in Ribeirão Preto, State of São Paulo, Brazil. Clinical and epidemiological data were collected retrospectively from the patient records. Of the 123 patients analyzed, 95 had an active disease that manifested in the different clinical forms of histoplasmosis. Men were the predominant gender, and most patients resided in the Northeast of the State of São Paulo and in the nearby municipalities of the State of Minas Gerais. The risk factors for acquiring histoplasmosis and prolonged contact in a rural environment were recorded in 43.9% and 82.9% of cases, respectively. Smoking, alcoholism, and comorbidity rates were high among the patients with the chronic pulmonary and subacute/chronic disseminated forms of histoplasmosis. Many patients achieved clinical cure spontaneously, but 58.9% required antifungals; the disease lethality rate was 5.3%. Immunocompetent individuals manifested the diverse clinical forms of histoplasmosis over a period of 4 decades, revealing an additional endemic area of this fungal disease in the Brazilian Southeast.

Highlights

  • INTRODUCTIONEpidemiological surveys based on the histoplasmin intradermal test and case reports of disease caused by Histoplasma capsulatum suggest the existence of histoplasmosis endemic areas in the five major regions of Brazil[1]

  • The distribution of infection by Histoplasma capsulatum in Brazil is heterogeneous, and the number of cases affecting immunocompetent individuals is relatively small

  • Epidemiological surveys based on the histoplasmin intradermal test and case reports of disease caused by Histoplasma capsulatum suggest the existence of histoplasmosis endemic areas in the five major regions of Brazil[1]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Epidemiological surveys based on the histoplasmin intradermal test and case reports of disease caused by Histoplasma capsulatum suggest the existence of histoplasmosis endemic areas in the five major regions of Brazil[1]. Many cases of co-infection of H. capsulatum in Brazilian patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) have been reported in recent years, with some series including more than 100 patients[2,3]. Until 1978, a short time before the human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) epidemic, only 36 cases of this fungal disease had been reported in Brazilian patients[4].

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