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Strongyloides spp. and Cytomegalovirus Co-Infection in Patient Affected by Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma.

Tommaso LupiaElena CrisàAlberto GaviraghiBarbara RizzelloAlessia Di VincenzoFabrizio Carnevale-SchiancaDaniela CaravelliMarco FizzottiFrancesco TolomeoUmberto VitoloIlaria De BenedettoNour ShbakloAlessandro CeruttiPiero FenuVanesa GregorcSilvia CorcioneValeria GhisettiFrancesco Giuseppe De Rosa
Published in: Tropical medicine and infectious disease (2023)
To our knowledge, we have described the first case of Strongyloides /Cytomegalovirus (CMV) concomitant infection that occurred in a European country. The patient was a 76-year-old woman affected by relapsed non-Hodgkin lymphoma who presented interstitial pneumonia with a rapidly progressive worsening of respiratory insufficiency, leading to cardiac dysfunction and consequent death. CMV reactivation is a common complication in immunocompromised patients, while hyperinfection/disseminated strongyloidiasis (HS/DS) is rare in low endemic regions, but has been widely described in Southeast Asia and American countries. HS and DS are two consequences of the failure of infection control by the immune system: HS is the uncontrolled replication of the parasite within the host and DS the spreading of the L3 larvae in organs other than the usual replication sites. Only a few cases of HS/CMV infection have been reported in the literature, and only in one patient with lymphoma as an underlying disease. The clinical manifestations of these two infections overlap, usually leading to a delayed diagnosis and a consequent poor outcome.
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