Ignacio Gadea
Autonomous University of Madrid
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Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2004
Rodrigo Martino; Miguel Salavert; Rocio Parody; José Francisco Tomás; Rafael de la Cámara; Lourdes Vázquez; Isidro Jarque; Elena Prieto; José Luis Sastre; Ignacio Gadea; Javier Pemán; Jorge Sierra
Twenty-six cases of Blastoschizomyces capitatus infection were diagnosed in 25 patients at 7 tertiary care hematology units in Spain over a 10-year period. Most patients (92%) had acute leukemia and developed infection during a period of severe and prolonged neutropenia. Two patients had esophagitis, and the rest had invasive infection. Fungemia (20 cases) was a common finding, with frequent visceral dissemination. The 30-day mortality associated with this infection was 52%, compared with 57% among patients with systemic infection. In a univariate analysis, the following 3 variables had a positive impact on 30-day survival: removal of the central venous catheter within 5 days after the onset of infection (P=.02), a good performance status (P=.003), and receipt of systemic prophylactic or empirical antifungal therapy before infection onset (P=.006). Outcome for neutropenic patients with B. capitatus infection is still poor. Rapid removal of the central venous catheter and novel antifungal therapies are recommended for treatment of this rare infection.
Journal of Internal Medicine | 2002
Manuel L. Fernández-Guerrero; L. Herrero; M. Bellver; Ignacio Gadea; Ricardo Fernández Roblas; M. De Górgolas
Abstract. Fernández‐Guerrero ML, Herrero L, Bellver M, Gadea I, Roblas RF, de Górgolas M (Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain). Nosocomial enterococcal endocarditis: a serious hazard for hospitalized patients with enterococcal bacteraemia. J Intern Med 2002; 252: 510–515.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2007
Marta Torres-Narbona; Jesús Guinea; José Martínez-Alarcón; Patricia Muñoz; Ignacio Gadea; Emilio Bouza
ABSTRACT This multicenter, population-based study evaluated the laboratory workload produced by zygomycetes and the number of cases of zygomycosis in Spain during 2005. Less than 8% of the patients who harbored zygomycete isolates had zygomycosis. The incidence of zygomycosis (6 cases) was 0.43 cases/1,000,000 inhabitants and 0.62 cases/100,000 hospital admissions.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2004
Ignacio Gadea; Manuel Cuenca-Estrella; Elena Prieto; Teresa M. Díaz-Guerra; Jose I. Garcia-Cia; Emilia Mellado; José Francisco Tomás; Juan L. Rodriguez-Tudela
ABSTRACT Seven cases of disseminated infection due to Dipodascus capitatus are reported. Infections occurred in a hematological unit of a tertiary hospital during a period of 5 years. Five cases were refractory to antifungal therapy. Antifungal susceptibility testing of seven isolates was performed, and strains were typed by PCR fingerprinting with the core sequence of phage M13 and by random amplification of polymorphic DNA with two primers, Ap12h and W-80A. A very short range of MICs of each antifungal agent was observed. The MICs of amphotericin B ranged between 0.50 and 2 μg/ml. Strains were susceptible in vitro to flucytosine and susceptible (dose-dependent) to fluconazole and itraconazole. Voriconazole exhibited an activity in vitro comparable to that of itraconazole. Typing techniques allowed seven additional isolates of D. capitatus neither geographically nor temporally related to be classified into two different genomic patterns. The genomic type of the seven strains from the hematological unit was identical regardless of typing technique utilized. It would indicate that the seven cases of disseminated infection could be related epidemiologically.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2008
Jaime Esteban; N. Z. Martín-de-Hijas; A.-I. Fernandez; Ricardo Fernández-Roblas; Ignacio Gadea
The objective was to determine the incidence, clinical significance, and epidemiology of the isolates of nonpigmented, rapidly growing mycobacteria (NPRGM) in Madrid, Spain. Patients with new isolates of NPRGM during 2005 were selected prospectively for review of clinical charts. Clinical significance was analyzed according internationally accepted criteria. Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) was used for the genotyping of the isolates. NPRGM were identified in 70 patients (1.51 cases/100,000 inhabitants). The species were M. abscessus (in 5 patients), M. chelonae (in 9), M. fortuitum (in 40), M. peregrinum (in 9), M. mageritense (in 5), M. mucogenicum (in 2), and M. alvei (in 1 patient). The isolates were clinically significant in 17 cases (24.3%, 0.39 cases/100,000 inhabitants): in 4 cases of M. abscessus, in 5 of M. chelonae, and in 9 of M. fortuitum. Only 10.7% of the respiratory isolates were significant, whereas 75% of the nonrespiratory ones were significant (p < 0.001). RAPD analysis showed no relationship among the 74 strains available for the study. No characteristic resistance pattern could be found, although 4 strains appeared to be resistant to amikacin. Significant isolates were mainly nonrespiratory ones. The most significant species was M. abscessus. No relationship between the various isolates was detected, ruling out interhuman transmission between these cases.
Enfermedades Infecciosas Y Microbiologia Clinica | 2007
Ignacio Gadea; Manuel Cuenca-Estrella; Estrella Martín; Javier Pemán; José Pontón; Juan L. Rodriguez-Tudela
Fungal infections are a diagnostic and therapeutic problem of increasing concern due to the frequency and severity of disseminated infection in immunocompromised patients. Culture-based methods are characteristically slow and have poor sensitivity; hence, other methods, based on the detection of fungus-specific genetic, antigenic and metabolic components are being developed to enable early diagnosis and specific treatment. Moreover, reproducible antifungal susceptibility methods that can be adapted for use in clinical laboratories have been standardized to allow in vitro detection of resistance, which correlates with a less favorable clinical outcome. In this paper we review the main microbiological procedures available for the diagnosis of fungal infections and for antifungal susceptibility testing.
Enfermedades Infecciosas Y Microbiologia Clinica | 2004
Ignacio Gadea; Manuel Cuenca-Estrella
En estas recomendaciones se analizan diferentes aspectos del diagnostico de laboratorio de las infecciones fungicas invasivas en pacientes inmunodeprimidos. Son recomendaciones basadas en las indicaciones establecidas en diferentes estudios y en opiniones de expertos. Ademas, se adjuntan los niveles de evidencia para cada recomendacion.
Enfermedades Infecciosas Y Microbiologia Clinica | 2017
Laura Prieto-Borja; Graciela Rodríguez-Sevilla; Álvaro Auñón; Concepción Pérez-Jorge; Enrique Sandoval; Joaquín García-Cañete; Ignacio Gadea; Ricardo Fernández-Roblas; Antonio Blanco; Jaime Esteban
BACKGROUND The development of sonication protocols over the last few years has improved the sensitivity of conventional cultures for the diagnosis of prosthetic-joint infection (PJI). However, the development of a new, specifically designed kit for the molecular diagnosis of PJI could provide a major improvement in this field. METHODS Prostheses retrieved from patients who underwent implant removal from May 2014 to May 2015 were sent for culture, and processed according to a previously defined protocol that included sonication. Furthermore, 180 microlitres of sonication fluid were used to carry out the multiplex PCR test (Unyvero i60 system®). A comparison of the sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predictive value, was performed. The study was approved by the Clinical Research Ethics Committee. RESULTS The analysis included 88 prostheses from 68 patients (1.29 prostheses/patient). The type of prostheses studied were knee (n=55), total hip (n=26), partial hip (n=5), and shoulder (n=2). Twenty-nine patients were diagnosed with a PJI (15 delayed, 12 acute, and 2 haematogenous infections). In 24 cases, the result of the PCR was positive, all but 1 corresponding to patients with clinical criteria of PJI. Nine resistance mechanisms were detected from 5 samples. The Unyvero i60 system® showed slightly better results than traditional culture in terms of specificity and PPV. CONCLUSIONS The Unyvero i60 system® may play a role in rapid diagnosis of PJI, due to its high specificity and PPV. However, despite these results, cultures have to be performed to detect organisms not detected by the system.
Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 1995
Ignacio Gadea; Manuel Cuenca; Natividad Benito; Juan M. Pereda; Franciso Soriano
The usefulness of cell culture of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid for the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in immunocompromised hosts has not been stressed previously. We report an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patient with disseminated toxoplasmosis who was diagnosed by isolation of Toxoplasma gondii in cell cultures from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2011
M.L. Fernández Guerrero; E. Askari; E. Prieto; Ignacio Gadea; A. Román
Scedosporium prolificans is an emerging agent for severe infections. Although among the dematiaceous fungi Scedosporium is the most frequently isolated in blood cultures, Scedosporium endocarditis is rarely reported. We show herein a patient with acute leukaemia who developed S. prolificans endocarditis. Twelve cases were found in an extensive review of the English literature. In six cases (46%), there was predisposing heart conditions such as a prosthetic valve or an intracavitary device. Only 4 patients (31%) were immunocompromised hosts with haematologic neoplasia, solid-organ transplantation or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Exposure to Scedosporium was observed in immunocompetent patients who developed infection while in the community. Scedosporium endocarditis occurred on both sides of the heart. Systemic and pulmonary emboli and other metastatic complications were seen in all of these patients. The overall mortality was 77% and, specifically, all of the immunocompromised hosts and 6 out of 7 patients with mitral or aortic valve endocarditis died. Patients with right-sided endocarditis associated with a removable intracardiac device exhibited a better prognosis. Scedosporium endocarditis, although still rare, is an emerging infection with an ominous prognosis. At the present time, valve replacement or the removal of cardiac devices plus combined antifungal treatment may offer the best possibility of cure.