The fungus Pneumocystis jirovecii is responsible for pneumocystosis (PcP), a life threatening pneumonia in patients undergoing HSCT. The spontaneous attack rate of 16% within the first 6 months following allogeneic HSCT reported in the 1980's has considerably decreased with prophylaxis. However, PcP still remains a concern in the transplant ward with an incidence rate up to 2.5% in allo- and 1.4% in autologous HSCT but up to 7.2% on low dose of Dapsone. The mortality of PcP is especially high in HSCT recipients. One of the main factors of PcP after HSCT seems to be either the lack of TMP-SMX prophylaxis (all the other prophylactic drugs being inferior to TMP-SMX), or poor compliance to prophylaxis. Due to the rarity of the disease after HSCT, it is impossible to study it in monocenter studies, except on very long periods of time which may not reflect current practice. Several questions deserve investigations in a multicenter study, about timing, risk factors, and outcome. Moreover, some European laboratories involved in the diagnosis of PcP have already given up to classical diagnostic methods and switched to qPCR. This implies that lower fungal burden can be detected and the clinical pertinence of such a diagnostic strategy deserves to be assessed.
Due to the lack of standardization, qPCR on sputum only will not be taken in account for the diagnosis of PcP. Knowing this is a non-interventional study, no additional visits or laboratory tests will be performed for the study. Only the available data will be collected.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
168
University Hospital Gasthuisberg
Leuven, Belgium
University of Amiens: CHU Amiens
Amiens, France
Hôpital Henri Mondor
Créteil, France
Hôpital Huriez
Lille, France
Hopital St. Louis
Paris, France
University Hospital Eppendorf
Hamburg, Germany
United St. Istvan and St. Laszlo Hospital
Budapest, Hungary
Rambam Medical Center
Haifa, Israel
Oslo University Hospital, Rikshospitalet
Oslo, Norway
Post-transplant risk factors for PCP infection
To identify pre- and post-transplant factors associated with development of PcP after allogeneic HSCT including: Underlying disease, graft versus host disease, relapse of underlying disease, immune status, co-infections, age
Time frame: 90 days
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.