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- Title
Multidisciplinary Management of COVID-Associated Mucormycosis Syndemic in India.
- Authors
Mehta, Rupa; Nagarkar, Nitin M.; Jindal, Atul; Rao, Karthik Nagaraja; Nidhin, S. B.; Arora, Ripu Daman; Sharma, Anil; Wankhede, Archana; Satpute, Satish; Chakravarty, Sharmistha; Agrawal, N. K.; Pranita; Kannauje, Pankaj; Behera, Ajoy; Thangaraju, Pugazhenthan
- Abstract
The study aimed to determine clinical presentation, contributing factors, medical and surgical management, and outcome of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-associated mucormycosis (CAM). A cross-sectional, single-center study was conducted on patients receiving multidisciplinary treatment for mucormycosis following the second wave of COVID-19 pandemic from April to June 2021 in India. Clinicoepidemiological factors were analyzed, 30-day overall survival and disease-specific survival were determined, and t-test was used to determine the statistical significance. A total of 215 patients were included in the study, the cases were stratified into sino-nasal 95 (44.2%), sino-naso-orbital 32 (14.9%), sino-naso-palatal 55 (25.6%), sino-naso-cerebral 12 (5.6%), sino-naso-orbito-cerebral 16 (7.4%), and sino-naso-orbito-palato-cerebral 5 (2.3%) based on their presentation. A multidisciplinary team treated patients by surgical wound debridement and medical therapy with broad-spectrum antibiotics and amphotericin B. Across all disease stages, cumulative 30-day disease-specific survival is 94% (p < 0.001, intergroup comparison, Breslow (generalized Wilcoxon) CI 95%) and overall 30-day survival is 87.9% (p < 0.001, intergroup comparison, Breslow (generalized Wilcoxon) CI 95%) (censored). Early identification, triaging, and proper multidisciplinary team management with systemic antifungals, surgical debridement, and control of comorbidities lead to desirable outcomes in COVID-associated mucormycosis. The patients with intracranial involvement have a higher chance of mortality compared to the other group.
- Subjects
INDIA; ANTIBIOTICS; EVALUATION of medical care; OPPORTUNISTIC infections; COVID-19; AMPHOTERICIN B; CONFIDENCE intervals; SYNDEMICS; CROSS-sectional method; T-test (Statistics); HEALTH care teams; MYCOSES; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; WOUND care; DISEASE risk factors; SYMPTOMS
- Publication
Indian Journal of Surgery, 2022, Vol 84, Issue 5, p934
- ISSN
0972-2068
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s12262-021-03134-0