Abstract

Nocardiosis (NOC) is an important cause of infection in immunocompromised patients. However, large series in patients with cancer have not been described. We review the records of patients with cancer and NOC who were evaluated at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, between 1988 and 2001, and we describe the incidence, microbiologic and clinical characteristics, treatment, and outcome of NOC in this population. Forty-two patients with a total of 43 episodes of NOC were identified (incidence of 60 cases of NOC per 100,000 admissions). Twenty-seven patients (64%) had hematologic malignancies. In 13 patients, NOC complicated bone marrow transplantation. Neutropenia was observed in 4 (10%) of 40 episodes with information available, and lymphopenia in 20 (50%) of 40 episodes. Patients had received steroids for 25 episodes (58%) and had received chemotherapy for 10 episodes (23%) within 30 days before the onset of NOC. Nine episodes of breakthrough NOC were identified in 7 (23%) of the 40 patients with information available. Pulmonary NOC was seen in 30 (70%) of 43 cases; soft-tissue NOC in 7 (16%); central venous catheter-related nocardemia in 3 (7%); and disseminated NOC, central nervous system NOC, and a perinephric abscess each in 1 (2%). Twenty-three percent of patients with pulmonary NOC had an acute presentation. complex was the most common causative species (77%). Therapy for NOC was mainly concurrent trimethoprim/ sulfamethoxazole and either a tetracycline or a beta-lactam. The median duration of treatment was 113 days (range, 10-600 d). Nine (60%) of 15 patients with outcome data died from NOC. NOC, although infrequent, is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with cancer. It has pleomorphic manifestations, and it can be seen as a breakthrough infection. The present study confirms that timely diagnosis, the site of NOC, the type of, the presence of comorbidities, and cytomegalovirus coinfection influence the outcome of patients with cancer and NOC.

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