Cryptococcosis primarily affects individuals with abnormal cellular immunity, especially patients with HIV in advanced stages. In recent years, its frequency has increased in immunosuppressed patients not infected with HIV, in particular in patients with cirrhosis, in whom peritonitis represents the most common clinical form.1
Case reportA 55-year-old male had been diagnosed 5 years earlier with chronic liver disease and was in a cirrhotic state, probably of mixed autoimmune origin as opposed to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. In late 2016, he was given a MELD prognostic score of 19 and therefore considered for pre-transplant assessment. In recent months, he had received treatment with prednisone 30mg/24h, azathioprine 50mg/24h, furosemide, spironolactone, ursodiol, cholestyramine and omeprazole.
Two months later, he was admitted to our hospital. Complementary tests showed: haemoglobin 11g/dl, leukocytes 9450mm3, platelets 163,000mm3, prothrombin time 44%, CRP 19mg/l, glucose 95mg/dl, creatinine 1.2mg/dl, glomerular filtration rate 68ml/min, total bilirubin 19.6mg/dl (direct bilirubin 15.9mg/dl), GOT 76U/l, GPT 98U/l, AP 105U/l and GGT 62U/l. Ultrasound and CT scanning of the abdomen showed chronic liver disease with signs of portal hypertension, moderate ascites and bilateral kidney stones. A study of his ascitic fluid showed: glucose 15mg/dl, total protein 1.82g/dl, LDH 728U/l, leukocytes 3440mm3 (85% PMN) and red blood cells 2640mm3.
On the fourth day, he started to have signs and symptoms of fever, abdominal pain, hypotension, tachycardia, tachypnoea, oligoanuria and poor distal perfusion. We drew samples for blood culture and urine culture as well as a sample of his ascitic fluid, then started empirical treatment with meropenem and transferred him to an intensive care unit.
The patient progressed to refractory shock and multiple organ failure and died 24h later. The microbiological results we received later showed that Cryptococcus neoformans (C. neoformans) var. grubii had been detected in his blood culture and ascitic fluid. Hence an ultimate diagnosis was made of septic shock secondary to spontaneous peritonitis caused by C. neoformans with secondary fungemia in an immunosuppressed patient with cirrhosis.
DiscussionCryptococcosis is a systemic mycosis caused by an encapsulated yeast-like fungus belonging to the genus Cryptococcus. The infection is essentially acquired by inhaling yeasts present in nature. When the fungus reaches the pulmonary alveoli, an immune response occurs that under normal conditions is sufficient to control the infection; however, in immunocompromised patients, the infection may spread via the bloodstream and migrate to different tissues.2
In non-HIV immunosuppressed patients, infections with C. neoformans used to be rare; however, due to the development of organ and tissue transplants3 and to the increase in the population receiving immunosuppressants,4 their frequency has been seen to increase, in particular in patients with cirrhosis.5,6
In peritonitis due to C. neoformans in the patient with cirrhosis, the infection is thought to travel from silent pulmonary foci to the gastrointestinal tract via the bloodstream and lymphatic system. The fungus infects the host through fungal overgrowth due to antibiotic pressure or translocation to the ascitic fluid due to gastrointestinal bleeding.7
In up to 40% of patients with chronic liver disease, the diagnosis is made after death. These patients are characterised by having a higher MELD prognostic score, a higher rate of cryptococcaemia, mechanical ventilation, septic shock and a higher likelihood of positive antigen tests.8 This profile strongly resembles that of our patient.
Diagnosis is primarily microbiological. Staining with India ink stains the entire preparation except the capsule and thus enables a presumptive diagnosis. Culture requires at least 3–4 days of incubation and establishes the definitive diagnosis; however, techniques such as MALDI-TOF may shorten this period.9 Capsular antigen detection is a technique with high sensitivity and specificity. Even so, false positives due to the presence of rheumatoid factor or in the serum of patients with bacteraemia or neoplasms have been reported. Molecular techniques represent valid alternatives when conventional techniques are not effective.
The recommended treatment for disseminated cryptococcosis in a non-HIV patient consists of amphotericin B combined with flucytosine (at least 2 weeks), followed by fluconazole, until the lapse of 10 weeks. In patients with kidney dysfunction such as our patient, amphotericin B deoxycholate may trigger nephrotoxicity; thus it is safer to use lipid formulas.10
This case leads us to believe that in a patient with cirrhosis who has spontaneous peritonitis refractory to empirical antibiotic treatment, a negative bacterial culture and a high red blood cell count in his or her ascitic fluid, the possibility of Cryptococcus infection should be considered.
Please cite this article as: Sena Corrales G, Perez Medina MI, Costo Muriel C, Reguera Iglesias JM. Peritonitis por Cryptococcus neoformans en el paciente cirrótico. Enferm Infecc Microbiol Clin. 2018;36:456–457.