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Volume 23, Number 2—February 2017
CME ACTIVITY - Dispatch

Risk Factors for Disseminated Coccidioidomycosis, United States

Camila D. Odio1, Beatriz E. Marciano, John N. Galgiani, and Steven M. HollandComments to Author 
Author affiliations: National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA (C.D. Odio, B.E. Marciano, S.M. Holland); University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson, Arizona, USA (J.N. Galgiani)

Main Article

Table 1

Summary of disseminated coccidioidomycosis cases reported in the literature*

Predisposition/no. sites affected
Sex, no.
Race/ethnicity, %
Age, y, median (range)
Site of disease, %
Survival, %
Pregnancy, N = 52

Black, 19; white, 14; Hispanic, 11; Asian 3
27 (17–38)
CNS, 18; bone, 5
42
Immunosuppression,† N = 79
M, 59; F, 19
Black, 11; white, 37; Hispanic, 20; Asian, 4
44 (1–83)
CNS, 25; bone, 37
44
Multisite dissemination, N = 100
M, 84; F, 16
Black, 39; white, 17; Hispanic, 13; Asian, 15
36 (1–84)
CNS, 29; bone, 62
72
Single site dissemination, N = 139 M, 115; F, 24 Black, 32; white, 21; Hispanic, 9; Asian, 17 33 (1–73) CNS, 9; bone, 50 99

*CNS, central nervous system.
†Oncologic, n = 8; HIV, n = 12; transplant, n = 24; steroids/immune-modulation, n = 35.

Main Article

1Current affiliation: Yale–New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.

Page created: January 12, 2017
Page updated: January 12, 2017
Page reviewed: January 12, 2017
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