Acute septic arthritis after kidney transplantation due to Acremonium

Séverine Beaudreuil1, Matthias Buchler1, Azmi Al Najjar1, Frédéric Bastides2, Maud Francois1, Tanh Hai Duong3, Hubert Nivet1, Dominique Richard-Lenoble3 and Yvon Lebranchu1

1 Department of Nephrology and Clinical Immunology 2 Department of Infectious Diseases 3 Department of Parasitology and Bacteriology CHU Bretonneau Tours cedex France Email: buchler{at}med.univ-tours.fr

Sir,

Fungal infections in renal transplant recipients are relatively rare, occurring mainly in the first 6 months post-transplantation. They are mainly due to Candida and Aspergillus [1]. We report the first case of acute septic arthritis due to Acremonium after kidney transplantation.

Case report. A 57-year-old man was transferred to our hospital for acute arthritis of the right knee. His medical history included coronary artery disease treated by angioplasty and an aorto-bifemoral endovascular prosthesis in 1989. Dialysis was started in 1995 because of nephroangiosclerosis.

He received a kidney transplant in October 1996. The immunosuppressive regimen included tacrolimus, azathioprine and steroids, without induction therapy. He developed no impaired glucose tolerance. Twenty-eight months after transplantation, he was hospitalized for arthritis of the right knee. He had no fever, but the C-reactive protein level was 76.5 mg/l. Arthrocentesis of the right knee yielded cloudy, yellow fluid with 5000 white blood cells/mm3 (100% polynuclear cells). No infectious agent was revealed by Gram staining and no crystals were detected. Acremonium species grew on mycobacterial cultures of the synovial fluid and on blood cultures after 21 days. No cutaneous involvement of the fungus could be determined. Echocardiography and Doppler ultrasound examination of the dialysis fistula failed to reveal any mycotic aneurysms. The patient was treated with 350 mg intravenous (i.v.) liposomal amphotericin B. Because of acute kidney failure this treatment was stopped and replaced by 180 mg/day amphotericin lipid complex IV combined with 600 mg/day oral itroconazole. The patient needed dialysis three times. Clinical and infectious parameters improved and blood cultures for mycobacteria became negative. The creatinine level returned to 130 µmol/l and itroconazole was continued for 3 weeks.

One month later, after withdrawal of itroconazole, recurrence of fungal infection in the right knee was diagnosed. No localization was found on CT scan of the aorto-bifemoral prosthesis. The patient was successfully treated with i.v. amphotericin B for 10 days in combination with 800 mg/day itroconazole.

Eighteen months later, despite being treated with itroconazole, an aneurysm of the right renal artery and a left mycotic endophtalmitis appeared, due to Acremonium. Treatment with 150 mg/day-1 amphotericin B lipid complex IV was unsuccessful. Aorto-bifemoral endovascular prosthesis and kidney transplant had to been removed and the patient returned to dialysis.

Discussion. Acremonium infection occurs in immunocompromised individuals with cutaneous, cardiac, neurologic, ocular or pulmonary localizations [2,3]. Only two cases of septic arthritis has been described [4,5]. Infection due to Acremonium species have been reported in renal graft recipients in three cases. Two were mycetomas, a common clinical manifestation [2], and one patient suffered from pulmonary abscesse associated with gastrointestinal tuberculosis 7 years after transplantation [6].

Fungal infections may be difficult to treat because of renal toxicity of amphotericin B and because of drug interactions with itroconazole, which is highly metabolized by the same isoform of cytochrom P450 as tacrolimus [7]. Other sites of infection must be systematically sought and prosthetic material has to be removed whenever possible [3]. The persistence of prosthetic material and immunosuppression due to tacrolimus could probably explain the unfavourable outcome of our patient with recurrence of Acremonium infection.

References

  1. Paya CV. Fungal infections in solid-organ transplantation. Clin Infect Dis 1993; 16:677–688[ISI][Medline]
  2. Van Etta LL, Peterson LR, Gerding DN. Mycetoma in a renal transplant patient. Arch Dermatol 1983; 119:707–708[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  3. Fincher RM, Fisher JF, Lovell RD, Newman CL, Espinel-Ingroff A, Shadomy HJ. Infection due to the fungus Acremonium (cephalosporium). Medicine 1991; 70:398–409[ISI][Medline]
  4. Ward HP, Martin WJ, Ivins JC, Weed LA. Cephalosporium arthritis. Mayo Clin Proc 1961; 36:337–343[Medline]
  5. Szombathy SP, Chez MG, Laxer RM. Acute septic arthritis due to Acremonium. J Rheum 1988; 15:714–715[ISI][Medline]
  6. Miro O, Campistol JM, Ribe A, Nicolas JM, Nadal P. Pulmonary Acremonium abscesses and gastrointestinal tuberculosis manifested as massive upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Nephrol Dial Transplant 1995; 10:1444–1446[ISI][Medline]
  7. Billaud EM, Guillemain R, Tacco F, Chevalier P. Evidence for a pharmacokinetic interaction between itroconazole and tacrolimus in organ transplant patients. Br J Clin Pharmacol 1998; 46:271–274[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]




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