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The aim of the study is to assess the prevalence and pattern of isolated fungi from patients with lung cancer at the time of diagnosis.
Full description
The role of infection as a cause of lung cancer is still being debated. Also, identification of potentially pathogenic organisms colonizing the lower respiratory tract in patients with lung cancer is important as this may increase the risk of lung infections in the natural course of lung cancer that can restrain the effect of oncological treatment and affect their survival (Klastersky and Aoun, 2004). Screening those cases for fungal colonization of the respiratory tract would characterize patients who needed closer monitoring for the occurrence of potential complications such as acute invasive fungal infection (Biswas et al., 2010).
Aim of the study The aim of the study is to detect the prevalence and pattern of isolated fungi from patients with lung cancer at the time of diagnosis before starting chemotherapy or radiotherapy.
Patients:
Inclusion criteria:
Patients presented to chest medicine department outpatient clinic with radiological and/or clinical manifestations suspicious of lung cancer such as a hilar mass, collapse or unresolved consolidation with accompanying volume loss according to Hollings and Shawn, (2000), will be subjected to FOB for diagnosis. Those definitely diagnosed as central bronchogenic carcinoma will be included in the study.
Exclusion criteria:
Study design:
This is cross-sectional prospective study
Methods:
All patients will be subjected to the following:
Demographic data (age and sex), smoking history and co-morbid diseases as COPD, hypertension (HTN), diabetes mellitus (DM), ischemic heart disease, bronchial asthma (BA) and previous malignancy.
Full history taking with stress on dyspnea, cough, chest pain, hemoptysis, toxemic symptoms and compressive manifestations.
General and local chest examination.
Laboratory work up:
Radiological assessment (Chest X-ray and CT chest):
Bronchoscopic procedures FOB examination will be performed using the video-bronchoscopes (PENTAX EB 1575 K) manufactured by Pentax Company Tokyo, Japan.
Bronchoscopic findings will be interpretated into:
Visible tumors may be either:
Bronchial wall distortion: the mucosa appears normal but there are secondary effects produced by tumor such as compression, edema or stenosis.
No abnormality detected.
Preservation of samples:
The BAL fluid will be collected in two sterile containers and transported immediately, one sample to the mycology laboratory and the other to cytological lab.
Tissue samples will be divided into 2 parts:
Diagnostic criteria for fungal infection will be considered according to De Pauw et al., (2008):
Proven" fungal infection : positive fungal culture or histological demonstration of fungal or hyphal elements in a specimen of the diseased tissue excluding bronchoalveolar lavage.
Fungus colonization : positive fungal culture in patients who do not meet the above criteria for proven .
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Exclusion criteria:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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