Gotzsche, P.C., & Johansen, H.K. (2002). Routine versus selective antifungal administration for control of fungal infections in patients with cancer. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2, CD000026.
The purpose of this systematic review was to evaluate studies conducted with various antifungal agents to determine whether or not commonly used antifungals decrease mortality in patients with cancer.
The search strategy used databases such as the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) and PubMed, as well as the reference lists of articles attached to the publications identified. Also reviewed were the proceedings of the ICAAC (from 1990–2007), General Meeting of the ASM (from 1990–2007), and the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (1995–2007). The authors also contacted expert researchers in the field.
Key words included random, control, blind, nystatin, amphotericin, fluconazole, itraconazol, ketoconazole, miconazol, voriconazol, bone-marrow, cancer, fungemia, hematologic, fumalignan, neoplasm, neutropenia, granulocytopenia, leukemia, or lymphoma
Randomized trials of antifungal treatments that were experimental in nature for patients with cancer were included. Studies that applied to treatment or prevention of oral candidiasis were excluded, as well as any non-randomized trials or randomized trials with noncancer patients.
Forty-four articles were retrieved. The authors reviewed the identified studies for mortality, mortality associated with a fungal infection, invasive fungal infection, colonization, use of additional antifungal therapy, and harm to patients.
The final article sample size was 32, with total subjects numbering 4,287.
Active treatment
Amphotecerin B was the only antifungal studied that showed reduced mortality significantly and consistently, used either prophylactically or empirically. Ketaconozole, fluconazole, and amhotercerin B were shown to be significant in overall effect for prophylactic administration. Itraconozole, fluconazole, and amphotecerin B all showed effectiveness in treating invasive fungal infection.
Amphotecerin B is highly effective in reducing mortality associated with fungal infection in patients with cancer. More studies should be done with large sample sizes to effectively compare amphotecerin B to other anti-fungals.