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BMC Infectious Diseases 2017-Feb

Phanerochaete sordida as a cause of pulmonary nodule in an immunocompromised patient: a case report.

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Naoki Watanabe
Kiyofumi Ohkusu
Masaya Okuda
Osamu Imataki
Tomoya Ishii
Kiyoshi Negayama
Akira Tadokoro
Nobuyuki Kita
Takehiro Takagi
Nobuhiro Kanaji

Keywords

Abstract

Phanerochaete sordida is a species of wood rotting fungus, which can degrade lignin, cellulose and hemicellulose contained in wood and other hard-to-biodegrade organic substances. However, to date, there have been no other reports demonstrating that P. sordida can infect humans.

A 66-year-old Japanese man presented for a mass increasing in size on his left thigh. He had been suffering from rheumatoid arthritis for 18 years and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for 20 years, for which he was being treated with 5 mg/day prednisolone and 8 mg/week methotrexate. The mass resection was performed two months later, and was diagnosed as malignant fibrous histiocytosis. However, a computed tomography examination for tumor recurrence after surgery showed a newly emergent pulmonary nodule. We therefore decided to resect the nodule by thoracoscopic procedure. Histopathological examination of the excised specimen showed that the lesion was a granuloma, with necrotic tissue and clumping of Aspergillus-like hyphae. Therefore, the nodule was diagnosed as a fungal infection and tissue specimens were cultured microbiologically. However, fungal growth was not observed. We consequently performed genetic analysis using a broad-range polymerase chain reaction. The 28S rRNA sequence demonstrated 100% homology with P. sordida using the NCBI BLAST program against the GenBank DNA databases.

Using broad-range polymerase chain reaction, we identified P. sordida as the causative agent of a pulmonary nodule. These findings indicate that P. sordida may be an additional opportunistic causative organism of pulmonary infection in immunocompromised patients.

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