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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 104, 684-687, Copyright © 1992 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association


ARTICLES

Pulmonary resection for fungal infection in children undergoing bone marrow transplantation

FM Lupinetti, DM Behrendt, RH Giller, ME Trigg and P de Alarcon
Department of Surgery, University of Iowa School of Medicine, Iowa City.

Recipients of bone marrow transplants for hematologic malignancies are at risk for a variety of infectious complications. We have reviewed our experience with six patients 2 to 15 years of age who developed significant fungal infections of the lungs before or after bone marrow transplant. No patient was known to have active fungal or bacterial infection at the time bone marrow transplant was performed. In two patients fungal infections were diagnosed before bone marrow transplant, and operations were performed to permit bone marrow transplant under optimal conditions. Four patients had pulmonary mycoses discovered after bone marrow transplant, and underwent operation 12 to 24 days following transplant. Operations consisted of lobectomy (three), multiple unilateral wedge resections (one), staged segmentectomy and contralateral wedge resection (one), and staged bilateral wedge resection (one). Survival following bone marrow transplant was achieved for 6 months and 11 months in patients undergoing lung resection before transplant, and for 24, 30, 39, and 60 days in patients undergoing lung resections after transplant. Bone marrow transplant recipients are at high risk of pulmonary mycoses, and a vigorous search for occult fungal infections should be carried out before transplant. Aggressive operative treatment of fungal infections of the lungs combined with antifungal chemotherapy before transplant may offer the best hope of extended survival.


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