Huang CH, Pang LT, Xu LC, Ge TT, Xu QM, Chen Z. Risk factors, clinical features, and short-term prognosis of spontaneous fungal peritonitis in cirrhosis: A matched case-control study. World J Clin Cases 2019; 7(17): 2438-2449 [PMID: 31559280 DOI: 10.12998/wjcc.v7.i17.2438]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Zhi Chen, MD, PhD, Professor, State Key Laboratory for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, Collaborative Innovation Center for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, The First Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, 79 Qingchun Road, Hangzhou 310003, Zhejiang Province, China. zjuchenzhi@zju.edu.cn
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Retrospective Study
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
World J Clin Cases. Sep 6, 2019; 7(17): 2438-2449 Published online Sep 6, 2019. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v7.i17.2438
Table 1 Comparison of clinical manifestations between spontaneous fungal peritonitis (case) and spontaneous bacteria peritonitis with a positive (control-1) or negative bacterial culture (control-2)
Variable
Case (n = 22)
Control-1 (n = 44)
P-value
Control-2 (n = 72)
P-value
Demographics data
Age (yr), M ± SD
60.0 ± 11.6
58.0 ± 12.5
0.55
56.9 ± 10.5
0.32
Sex (% male)
17 (77.3%)
37 (82.2%)
0.51
55 (74.3%)
1
Current smoking n (%)
7 (31.8%)
20 (45.5%)
0.43
32 (44.4%)
0.33
Alcohol abuse n (%)
7 (31.8%)
16 (36.4%)
0.79
30 (41.3%)
0.46
Aetiology of cirrhosis
Viral n (%)
14 (63.6%)
27 (61.4%)
44 (61.1%)
Alcohol n (%)
2 (9.1%)
8 (18.2%)
0.66
18 (25.0%)
0.334
Others n (%)
6 (27.3%)
9 (20.5%)
13 (18.1%)
Complication
Variceal bleeding n (%)
8 (36.4%)
6 (13.6%)
0.05
18 (25.0%)
0.41
Hepatorenal syndrome n (%)
8 (36.4%)
10 (22.7%)
0.26
9 (12.5%)
0.023
HE n (%)
8 (36.4%)
12 (27.3%)
0.57
14 (19.4%)
0.15
Charlson index (IQR)
4 (3.7-5.0)
4 (3.0-5.0)
0.46
3 (3-5)
0.007
Laboratory examination
WBC, 109 cells/L (IQR)
11.7 (8.2-19.1)
5.6 (2.9-11.2)
0.001
6.2 (4.0-9.5)
<0.001
C-reactive protein, mg/L (IQR)
77.4 (55.9-138.2)
31.4 (14.7-50.6)
<0.001
22.7 (8.9-42.1)
<0.001
Creatinine, μmol/L (IQR)
98.0 (69.5-147.8)
86.0 (60.5-165.0)
0.75
81 (67.0-105.0)
0.228
Albumin, g/dL (M ± SD)
28.1 ± 4.1
26.6±7.5
0.41
29.8 ± 4.9
0.09
Total bilirubin, μmol/L(IQR)
103.5 (27.5-271.5)
85 (34.2-196.5)
0.96
59.5 (30.0-129.0)
0.51
INR (IQR)
1.40 (1.2-2.0)
1.6 (1.3-2.1)
0.37
1.5 (1.3-1.7)
0.56
Ascites PMN (IQR)
2550 (338-4700)
1800 (650-4500)
0.56
550 (302-1375)
0.004
Ascites albumin g/dL (M ± SD)
18.0±8.2
11.4 ± 7.3
0.002
13.1 ± 9.5
0.009
Clinical presentation
Abdominal pain
7 (31.8%)
17 (38.6%)
0.79
17 (23.6%)
0.578
Fever (T ≥ 38°C)
12 (54.5%)
22 (50.0%)
0.79
19 (26.4%)
0.02
Antibiotic treatment before peritonitis (d)
15.4 (3.8-24.8)
2 (0.3-10.0)
0.001
2 (0-8.0)
<0.001
PPI administration
8 (36.4%)
27 (61.4%)
0.07
43(59.7%)
0.086
Nosocomial infection
13 (59.1%)
30 (68.2%)
0.59
44 (61.1%)
1
ICU admission
1 (4.5%)
2 (4.5%)
1
1 (1.4%)
0.42
Septic shock n (%)
7 (31.8%)
8 (18.2%)
0.23
3 (4.2%)
0.001
SIRS n (%)
14 (63.6%)
20 (45.5%)
0.2
14 (19.4%)
<0.001
Concomitant bacterial infection
12 (54.5%)
13 (29.5%)
0.12
3 (4.2%)
<0.001
Blood infection
6 (27.2%)
9 (20.5%)
1
1 (1.4%)
<0.001
Pneumonia
3 (13.6%)
3 (6.8%)
0.39
2 (2.8%)
0.048
Bacterial peritonitis
9 (40.9%)
-
-
-
-
Other sites
1 (4.5%)
1 (2.3%)
-
1 (1.4%)
-
Severity score
SOFA (M ± SD)
7.1 ± 3.8
7.6 ± 4.7
0.65
5.2 ± 2.6
0.035
CLIF-SOFA
7.1 ± 3.4
8.1 ± 4.4
0.33
5.6 ± 3.0
0.048
APACHE II
7.6 ± 6.1
6.7 ± 5.4
0.58
3.0 ± 3.1
<0.001
MELD (IQR)
15.9 (7.5-25.2)
18.3 (9.3-25.9)
0.76
14.6 (9.7-20.3)
0.57
MELD-Na (IQR)
23.0 (10.4-35.1)
20.4 (9.7-31.1)
0.88
15.5 (10.1-25.0)
0.17
CTP (IQR)
11.0 (8-12.3)
11.5 (10.0-12.0)
0.39
10 (9.0-12.0)
0.48
15-d mortality
10 (45.1%)
9 (20.4%)
0.046
5 (6.9%)
<0.001
Table 2 Comparison of clinical manifestations between spontaneous fungal peritonitis and fungiascites
Variable
Total (n = 35)
SFP (n = 22)
Fungiascites (n = 13)
P-value
Antibiotic treatment before peritonitis (d)
12 (5.0-23.0)
15.4 (3.8-24.8)
12.0 (6.0-22.0)
0.8
Anti-fungal therapy
15 (42.9%)
8 (36.4%)
7 (53.8%)
0.48
Septic shock n (%)
8 (22.9%)
7 (31.8%)
1 (4.2%)
0.21
WBC, 109 cells/L (IQR)
9.4 (5.6-18.1)
11.7 (8.2-19.1)
6.8 (3.6-12.0)
0.046
C-reactive protein, mg/L (IQR)
69.0 (33.3-110.5)
77.4 (55.9-138.2)
36.6 (13.4-72.1)
0.01
SIRS n (%)
19 (54.3%)
14 (63.6%)
5 (38.5%)
0.18
Fungus
Candida spp.
26 (74.2%)
18 (81.8%)
8 (61.5%)
-
Trichosporon
2 (5.7%)
1 (4.5%)
1 (7.6%)
-
Aspergillus
5 (14.3%)
3 (13.6%)
2 (15.3%)
-
Cryptococcus laurentii
2 (5.7%)
0 (0%)
2 (15.3%)
-
Severity score
SOFA (M ± SD)
6.8 ± 3.5
7.1 ± 3.8
5.2 ± 2.6
0.77
MELD (IQR)
14.7 (8.0-24.3)
15.9 (7.5-25.2)
14.2 (8.8-24.8)
0.92
CTP (IQR)
11.0 (9.0-12.0)
11.0 (8.0-12.3)
11.0 (9.0-11.5)
0.7
15-d mortality
13 (37.1%)
10 (45.1%)
3 (23.7%)
0.28
Table 3 Risk factors for spontaneous fungal peritonitis as determined by univariate logistic regression analysis
Variable
Control-1 group (n = 44) vs Case group (n = 22)
Control-2 (n = 72) vs Case group (n = 22)
OR (95%CI)
P-value
OR (95%CI)
P-value
Variceal bleeding
3.619 (1.065-12.296)
0.039
1.71 (0.619-4.751)
0.3
Hepatorenal syndrome
1.943 (0.635-5.947)
0.245
4.00 (1.312-12.194)
0.015
HE
1.524 (0.511-4.546)
0.45
2.367 (0.831-6.742)
0.107
Charlson index
0.936 (0.682-1.284)
0.681
1.266 (0.911-1.759)
0.16
chemoradiotherapy
2.048 (0.122-34.370)
0.618
3.381 (0.203-56.396)
0.396
Alcohol abuse
0.817 (0.275-2.422)
0.715
0.657 (0.237-1.798)
0.41
Length of hospital stay (d)
0.974 (0.944-1.004)
0.092
0.997 (0.969-1.035)
0.874
Antibiotic treatment before diagnosis (d)
1.063 (1.012-1.115)
0.014
1.054 (1.014-1.096)
0.008
PPI administration
0.436 (0.153-1.239)
0.119
0.467 (0.177-1.234)
0.124
Child C grade
0.551 (0.173-1.755)
0.313
1.211 (0.438-3.352)
0.712
MELD score
0.988 (0.942-1.035)
0.603
1.025 (0.970-1.083)
0.38
Table 4 Cox regression analyses of risk factors associated with 15-d mortality (dead: n = 13; alive: n = 22) in patients with spontaneous fungal peritonitis or fungiascites
Univariate
Multivariate
HR (95%CI)
P-value
HR (95%CI)
P-value
Age
0.959 (0.918-1.003)
0.066
Variceal bleeding
0.872 (0.285-2.666)
0.81
Hepatorenal syndrome
7.3 (2.216-24.435)
0.001
5.328 (1.050-18.900)
0.01
HE
2.654 (0.889-7.925)
0.08
Charlson index
1.155 (0.742-1.796)
0.523
WBC, 109 cells/L
1.064 (1.009-1.122)
0.023
1.062 (0.933-1.137)
0.081
C-reactive protein, mg/L
1.003 (0.992-1.015)
0.564
INR
1.201 (0.520-2.776)
0.668
Total bilirubin, μmol/L
1.005 (1.003-1.008)
<0.001
1.005 (1.002-1.008)
0.002
Creatinine, μmol/L
1.010 (1.003-1.017)
0.005
Serum sodium, mmol/L
0.883 (0.814-0.958)
0.003
0.949 (0.867-1.039)
0.256
Concurrent bacterial infection
0.715 (0.240-2.129)
0.546
Anti-fungal therapy
0.758 (0.248-2.319)
0.627
SIRS
3.458 (0.948-12.611)
0.06
SOFA
1.305 (1.132-1.505)
<0.001
MELD
1.080 (1.021-1142)
0.008
CTP
1.727 (1.214-2.483)
0.002
APACHE II
1.113 (1.025-1.207)
0.01
Table 5 Performance of six prognostic scoring systems in predicting mortality in patients with spontaneous fungal peritonitis / fungiascites
Prognostic model
Auroc (95%CI)
Sensitivity (95%CI)
Specificity (95%CI)
Z score
P-value
SOFA
0.850 (0.707-0.993)
61.5 (31.8-86.1)
90.9 (70.8-98.9)
CLIF-SOFA
0.825 (0.686-0.964)
84.6 (54.6-98.1)
77.3 (54.6-92.2)
0.498
0.619
CTP
0.825 (0.675-0.975)
69.2 (38.6-90.9)
86.4 (65.1-97.1)
0.42
0.674
APPACHE II
0.722 (0.521-0.923)
61.5 (31.6-90.9)
86.4 (65.1-97.1)
1.335
0.182
MELD-Na
0.759 (0.556-0.962)
76.9 (46.2-95.0)
77.3 (54.6-92.2)
0.723
0.469
MELD
0.724 (0.514-0.934)
69.2 (38.6-90.9)
86.4 (65.1-97.1)
1.035
0.301
SIRS
0.680 (0.496-0.864)
76.9 (46.2-95.0)
59.1 (36.4-79.3)
1.429
0.153
Citation: Huang CH, Pang LT, Xu LC, Ge TT, Xu QM, Chen Z. Risk factors, clinical features, and short-term prognosis of spontaneous fungal peritonitis in cirrhosis: A matched case-control study. World J Clin Cases 2019; 7(17): 2438-2449