Infection among 210 patients with surgically staged Hodgkin's disease.

Autor: Coker DD, Morris DM, Coleman JJ, Schimpff SC, Wiernik PH, Elias EG
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The American journal of medicine [Am J Med] 1983 Jul; Vol. 75 (1), pp. 97-109.
DOI: 10.1016/0002-9343(83)91173-7
Abstrakt: To determine the incidence and types of infections in Hodgkin's disease, particularly those related to the overwhelming pneumococcal sepsis syndrome, 210 consecutive patients with previously untreated Hodgkin's disease who underwent staging laparotomy with splenectomy from March 1968 to October 1979 were reviewed. For 178 patients (85 percent) alive at the end of the study, the mean follow-up time was 68.1 months. Eighty-two serious infections occurred among 59 (28 percent) of the patients; 47 (57 percent) serious infections were microbiologically documented and 35 (43 percent) were clinically documented. Forty-seven microbiologically documented serious infections occurred in 34 patients and consisted of 23 episodes of pneumonia, 10 cases of bacteremia, seven wound infections, two cases of disseminated herpes zoster, one subphrenic abscess, and four miscellaneous infections. Microbiologically documented serious infections occurring during initial treatment or remission had lower incidences of leukopenia (29 versus 58 percent) (p = 0.09) and death (11 versus 53 percent) (p = 0.005) than those occurring after relapse of Hodgkin's disease. Of the microbiologically documented serious infections, 76 percent were associated with a predisposing factor(s) (leukopenia, postoperative state, steroids, peripheral neuropathy, leukemia), of which 34 percent were fatal. Microbiologically documented serious infections unassociated with a predisposing factor were never fatal, including the only episode of pneumococcal sepsis in the series. In contrast to microbiologically documented serious infections, only 14 percent of clinically documented serious infections (versus 38 percent) were fatal. The overwhelming pneumococcal sepsis syndrome and other infections thought to be associated with the asplenic state are uncommon problems in patients with Hodgkin's disease after splenectomy.
Databáze: MEDLINE