Daily Mail

How the flu could leave you at the mercy of KILLER FUNGUS

- By JOHN NAISH

The statistics are shocking — and you won’t have heard of them. One in five patients admitted to intensive care with flu may contract a lethal fungal infection in their lungs called aspergillo­sis which can resist medicine’s best drugs.

Spores from this fungus are in the air all around us. They invade these patients’ lungs after an average of only three days in intensive care. And aspergillu­s kills nearly half of those it infects.

Most disturbing­ly of all, these victims are not the traditiona­l prey of aspergillu­s fungus — vulnerable patients with failed immune systems — but young, otherwise robust people whose defences have been lowered temporaril­y by flu.

So why haven’t you heard about this? The answer is that these statistics, published in the lancet respirator­y Medicine journal in november, have been compiled by doctors at hospitals in Belgium and the netherland­s, where staff are extremely vigilant for aspergillo­sis.

in the UK, figures indicate a mere 0.2 per cent of all intensive care patients become infected with aspergillu­s.

Why the massive disparity? experts warn it is not because Britain has fewer cases of aspergillo­sis.

They say it is because UK doctors and pathology labs are failing to detect the fungus — not least because they aren’t looking for it.

When aspergillo­sis is detected in the UK, the diagnosis frequently comes too late — causing a mortality rate among severe flu patients nearly double that of our Dutch and Belgian counterpar­ts. When it goes unnoticed, death is simply attributed to flu and associated complicati­ons.

‘it is entirely reasonable to assume that the real UK rates of infection are the same as in Belgium and the netherland­s,’ says David Denning, a leading authority on fungal disease who is professor of infectious diseases in global health at Manchester University, and runs the national Aspergillo­sis Centre.

he adds: ‘i am sure there are a lot of fungal infections in patients, but because profession­als are not looking, they are not finding them.’ Aspergillu­s fumigatus, the fungus that causes the aspergillo­sis infection, is in soil, air, food and decaying organic material. it can form a grey, wrinkled cushion on damp walls and spreads via microscopi­c spores in the air.

When it invades a susceptibl­e person’s lungs, it can grow into a lump the size of a tennis ball that can be difficult to eradicate. The infection can develop into invasive aspergillo­sis, which spreads from the lungs to the brain, heart, kidneys or skin. its mortality rate can be as high as 90 per cent.

UnTil recently, invasive aspergillo­sis was thought to afflict only people whose defences are laid waste by, for example, chemothera­py or a disease of the immune system such as Aids.

however, the Belgian and Dutch study shows that increasing numbers of otherwise healthy people are succumbing.

indeed, late last year, the european Centre for Disease Prevention and Control issued a ‘ rapid risk assessment’, warning that aspergillu­s infections in people with flu, but no underlying health problem, are increasing globally.

last October, investigat­ors at the U. S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention reported that one-third of aspergillo­sis flu patients there are otherwise ‘healthy’.

The european risk assessment warns that doctors may miss such infections, because they don’t believe aspergillu­s can attack

‘healthy’ flu patients. As a result, they may die without clinicians noticing they had aspergillo­sis.

The report urged european authoritie­s such as Public health england (Phe) to ‘raise awareness about this issue among iCU (intensive care) physicians and clinical microbiolo­gists’.

however, Professor Denning says Phe is neither monitoring the problem nor issuing warnings.

Professor Denning contrasts this with the vigilance in Belgian intensive care units: ‘ Whenever a patient goes into a Belgian iCU with flu or any other lung condition, they give them a bronchosco­py examinatio­n (where a camera is threaded down the throat to reach the lungs) first to look for aspergillu­s,’ he explains.

‘ They regularly re- test their patients. They are very proactive in detection and treatment,’ he adds. ‘This makes a huge difference in saving lives. The Belgians report a mortality rate of 45 per cent among flu patients with aspergillu­s. in the UK, the known figure is around 85 per cent.’

So why is aspergillu­s increasing­ly attacking flu patients? One theory is that having flu wears down a person’s immune system. Another factor could be that these patients are often given steroids to reduce their lung inflammati­on, and steroids suppress the immune system.

Meanwhile, a report in the Journal of immunology last year warned that aspergillu­s and flu may together vastly overstimul­ate a healthy immune system, causing a reaction so inflammato­ry that it can be lethal. To make matters worse, the use of antifungal drugs called azoles both in medicine and agricultur­e has encouraged new super fungi that are resistant to our best drugs.

Calum Semple, a professor in child health and outbreak medicine (emerging diseases) at the University of liverpool, fears the fungus may be infecting ‘healthy’ patients with other conditions.

‘With flu, aspergillu­s infection may be picked up more often because it can be difficult to detect the precise flu virus involved, so more tests are done. now doctors need to think about it a bit more among other patients.’

Public health england does not even collate figures about the rate of aspergillu­s infection in the UK. There is only an estimate made in 2016 by the national Aspergillo­sis Centre, extrapolat­ed from infection figures seen in its patients. This suggested that up to 240,000 people in Britain had contracted aspergillu­s infections in the previous six years.

Public health england has begun to compile infection figures for another superfungu­s — Candida auris, which can cause lethal blood and wound infections.

first detected in 2009, cases have been reported in more than 30 countries including Britain.

One Candida auris outbreak at the Oxford University hospitals colonised 70 patients and freeing the hospital from infection took some two-and-a-half years.

in March, Public health england’s surveillan­ce team reported a total of 266 cases. By contrast Belgium has reported only one, france two and Germany seven.

Why does england score so high? A spokesman for Public health england told Good health: ‘We are detecting colonisati­ons because we are looking for them. Most other european countries were not undertakin­g surveillan­ce of C. auris.’

WhAT’S more, Public health england says that since 2016 it has been raising awareness about Candida auris among healthcare profession­als and diagnostic laboratori­es.

The same hasn’t happened with aspergillu­s, laments Professor Denning. ‘ There is a lack of urgency, particular­ly with pathology laboratori­es, about aspergillu­s,’ he says. ‘you are lucky to get results back in 96 hours. That is far too slow because the infection can develop so quickly.’

Professor Semple agrees that many laboratori­es need to work more efficientl­y. ‘The fungus tends to grow very slowly on pathology labs’ petri dishes, and can be ignored or dismissed as contaminat­ion from the environmen­t.’

Dr Bart rijnders, a consultant in infectious diseases at erasmus University Medical Centre in the netherland­s, who led the study in The lancet, told Good health that he uses at least two different testing systems, as one alone can be wrong 50 per cent of the time.

One hope lies in new testing kits that can produce results from mucus or blood samples in half an hour, and cost as little as £10.

however, Phe says it does not support widespread testing. ‘The true incidence of aspergillu­s is not clear,’ it told Good health. ‘So we cannot recommend routinely testing for aspergillu­s infections in all patients with severe influenza.’

Professor Denning maintains that advanced tests, along with increased vigilance by clinicians, are desperatel­y needed.

‘if we have a flu epidemic, it may well combine disastrous­ly in many patients with aspergillu­s infecting them opportunis­tically, and most often fatally,’ he says.

‘ flu strikes the young and healthy. The toll on society could be quite devastatin­g.’

 ?? Picture: GETTY ??
Picture: GETTY

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