Introduction
Rationale for guideline update
Six years after the Southern African HIV Clinicians Society cryptococcal disease guideline
was published in 2013, cryptococcal meningitis (CM) remains an important cause of
mortality among antiretroviral treatment (ART)-naïve and ART-experienced HIV-seropositive
adults in South Africa.
1,2
Several important practice-changing developments led us to update the guideline to
diagnose, prevent and manage this common fungal opportunistic infection. The World
Health Organization (WHO) published a guideline for advanced HIV disease in 2017 and
a guideline relevant to resource-limited settings for HIV-associated CM in 2018.
3,4
Cryptococcal antigen (CrAg) screening and pre-emptive treatment reduced all-cause
mortality among ambulatory participants in a randomised clinical trial in Zambia and
Uganda.
5
Following an evaluation of reflex versus provider-initiated screening, national reflex
laboratory CrAg screening was implemented in South Africa in 2016.
6,7
Recently completed clinical trials conducted in resource-limited settings have provided
evidence for the best first-line antifungal regimens for CM and the role of corticosteroids
in CM.
8,9
Finally, international and local advocacy efforts have resulted in increasing, yet
still limited, access to flucytosine and a reduced cost of liposomal amphotericin
B for the treatment of CM.
10
Summary of major changes to the guideline
We now recommend CrAg screening for all adults or adolescents with a CD4+ T-lymphocyte
(CD4) count < 200 cells/µL who are initiating ART for the first time, switching after
ART failure or re-entering into care after prior disengagement.
Reflex laboratory CrAg screening is recommended as the preferred approach in South
Africa, although alternative approaches may be more suitable for other countries in
Southern Africa.
To diagnose CM, lumbar puncture (LP) is recommended for all patients with a new positive
CrAg screening test result.
The recommended induction regimen for CM is 1 week of amphotericin B deoxycholate
(1 mg/kg/day) and flucytosine (100 mg/kg/day in four divided doses), followed by 1
week of fluconazole (1200 mg daily for adults; 12 mg/kg/day for children and adolescents
up to a maximum of 800 mg daily).
We have recommended alternative induction regimens for CM among patients with renal
dysfunction, including liposomal amphotericin B-based options.
A higher dose of fluconazole is now recommended during the 8-week consolidation phase
for CM (800 mg daily for adults; 12 mg/kg/day for children and adolescents up to a
maximum of 800 mg daily).
Maintenance treatment for CM is recommended to be continued for at least 12 months
and until a single CD4 count is > 200 cells/µL and the HIV viral load is suppressed.
We have included new recommendations for the prevention, monitoring and management
of flucytosine toxicities.
Although a manometer is the most accurate way to measure raised intracranial pressure,
we have suggested alternative options for assessment of elevated pressure when it
is unavailable.
Patients with a positive blood CrAg test result in whom CM is ruled out by LP (a negative
cerebrospinal fluid [CSF] CrAg test is the most rapid method to establish this) should
be given oral fluconazole alone as induction therapy (adults: 1200 mg for 2 weeks).
Antiretroviral treatment may be commenced immediately.
We recommend immediate referral for LP in all patients with a new positive blood CrAg
test who initiated ART within the 4-week period prior to the CrAg test. Among those
with a negative CSF CrAg test (i.e. in whom CM is excluded), ART is recommended to
be continued and fluconazole pre-emptive therapy should be initiated. Among those
with a new diagnosis of CM during the first 4 weeks of ART, the guideline panel thought
that there was clinical equipoise in terms of a decision to continue or interrupt
ART.
Antifungal susceptibility testing is now recommended if a patient has a single relapse
episode of CM and other causes have been excluded.
Recommendation 1: Cryptococcal antigen screening and pre-emptive treatment
Background
Early diagnosis of HIV infection and early initiation of ART before immunosuppression
is the most important strategy to reduce the incidence of CM and CM-associated mortality.
In South Africa, patients should initiate ART according to the current national guideline.
1,11,12
Screening for subclinical cryptococcal disease has a proven mortality benefit among
HIV-seropositive patients with low CD4 counts. In the Reduction of Early Mortality
among HIV-infected Subjects sTarting AntiRetroviral Therapy (REMSTART) trial, HIV-seropositive
outpatients with a CD4 count < 200 cells/µL, who were randomised to receive CrAg screening
and community-based ART adherence support, had a 28% reduced all-cause mortality rate
compared to those receiving standard of care (intervention: 134/1001 [13%] vs. standard:
180/998 [18%]).
5
While the previous Southern African guideline recommended CrAg screening for patients
with CD4 < 100 cells/µL, this approach will fail to detect a substantial proportion
of cases that occur in patients with CD4 counts between 100 cells/µL and 200 cells/µL.
A meta-analysis estimated that the pooled global prevalence of cryptococcal antigenaemia
was 6.5% among those with CD4 count < 100 cells/µL and 2% among those with a CD4 count
between 101 cells/µL and 200 cells/µL.
13
A post hoc analysis of REMSTART trial data revealed an important mortality benefit
of CrAg screening and pre-emptive treatment in subgroups of patients with a CD4 count
< 100 cells/µL and with CD4 count of 101 cells/µL – 200 cells/µL.
4
Thus, we now recommend that 200 cells/µL should be used as the CD4 threshold below
which patients should be screened for cryptococcal disease, where resources permit
(Table 1).
TABLE 1
Summary of recommendation 1.
Scenario
Sub-recommendations
HIV-seropositive adults or adolescents (≥ 10 years) with a CD4 count < 200 cells/µL
Screen for cryptococcal antigenaemia on serum or plasma by reflex laboratory testing
(preferred) or clinician-initiated testing
If clinician-initiated testing is performed, screening should be restricted to adults
or adolescents without prior cryptococcal disease who are initiating or re-initiating
ART
A cryptococcal antigen lateral flow assay is the preferred method for screening (vs.
a latex agglutination test format)
HIV-seropositive children (< 10 years)
There are insufficient data to recommend routine cryptococcal antigen screening in
children
Patients with a new positive CrAg test result
Refer to Figure 1 and Recommendations 1, 3 and 5 regarding further investigations,
antifungal treatment and timing of ART
ART was started before a new CrAg-positive result was received
Immediately refer for LP all patients with a positive blood CrAg who initiated a new
ART regimen in the previous 4 weeks
Patients with a negative CrAg test result
Evaluate for other opportunistic infections including tuberculosis and start ART as
soon as possible
ART, antiretroviral treatment; CrAg, cryptococcal antigen; LP, lumbar puncture.
Detailed recommendations
Who to screen?
HIV-seropositive adults and adolescents (≥ 10 years) with a CD4 count < 200 cells/µL
are recommended to be screened for cryptococcal antigenaemia. If screening is initiated
by a clinician (medical practitioner or a nurse trained to initiate ART) and not performed
reflexively in the laboratory, the expert panel recommends that screening must be
restricted to adults and adolescents initiating ART for the first time, switching
after treatment failure or re-initiating ART (after an episode of interruption that
was > 3 months) with a CD4 count < 200 cells/µL and no prior CM. Although adults or
adolescents with a CD4 count < 200 cells/µL who are virally suppressed on ART may
also be at risk of cryptococcal disease,
14
there is insufficient current evidence to routinely recommend screening in this group.
There are also insufficient data to recommend routine cryptococcal screening of HIV-infected
children (< 10 years) in whom the incidence of CM is much lower.
15
Even though data for adolescents are limited, the WHO currently recommends screening
for adolescents. South African data indicate an increasing incidence of CM from the
age of 10 years onwards.
15
Screening strategies
With reflexive laboratory CrAg screening, remnant blood samples (submitted to the
laboratory for CD4 testing) are tested automatically for CrAg below a specified CD4
threshold. This approach is superior to clinician-initiated screening (where clinicians
specifically request a blood CrAg test) in terms of screening coverage.
16
A South African modelling study comparing the two strategies and using a CD4 threshold
of < 100 cells/µL demonstrated that reflex screening was more cost-effective and saved
more lives.
7
Although the CrAg latex agglutination (LA) test format has been more extensively evaluated
for the diagnosis of cryptococcal disease, a rapid CrAg lateral flow assay is simpler
to perform on blood samples and more accurate.
17
The National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS) expanded its reflex laboratory CrAg
screening service across South Africa in October 2016.
6
Between October 2016 and March 2019, more than 600 000 persons were screened, with
a CrAg+ prevalence of 5.7% (N.P. Govender, pers. comm., 02 September 2019, National
Institute for Communicable Diseases). However, the real-world effectiveness of this
screen-and-treat strategy in terms of impact on mortality has yet to be determined.
The laboratory turnaround time is very short for both CD4 count and reflex CrAg screening
test results; however, initiation of ART should not be unnecessarily delayed while
awaiting CrAg test results in patients with advanced HIV disease who have no clinical
features of meningitis.
Management of cryptococcal antigen-positive patients without previous cryptococcal
meningitis
All patients who screen CrAg-positive for the first time should have an LP performed.
The absence of symptoms of meningitis does not exclude CM: approximately one in three
patients with asymptomatic cryptococcal antigenaemia has concurrent CM.
18
CrAg-positive patients who are subsequently identified as having CM should be managed
as per Recommendation 3. In the latter group, ART should be commenced 4–6 weeks after
the introduction of antifungal therapy. Patients in whom CM is ruled out by LP (a
negative CSF CrAg test is the most rapid method to establish this) should be given
oral fluconazole alone as induction therapy (adults: 1200 mg for 2 weeks). This is
followed by standard consolidation and maintenance treatment regimens as per Recommendation
3. In these blood CrAg-positive/CSF CrAg-negative patients, ART may be commenced immediately,
with the caveat that there is no published evidence for this recommendation.
19
Adolescents and children should receive fluconazole 12 mg/kg/day (to a maximum of
800 mg per day) for 2 weeks followed by standard consolidation and maintenance treatment.
The timing of ART initiation should be the same as adults.
Patients who decline an LP can be stratified according to the presence or absence
of meningitis symptoms (Figure 1), although this approach is now recognised to be
suboptimal.
18
Patients with headache, nausea, vomiting or other signs of CM should be treated as
such (as per Recommendation 3), whereas those without symptoms can be treated with
fluconazole alone, as for patients in whom CM has been excluded. However, this approach
will result in some cases of asymptomatic or subclinical CM being missed. If a screening
blood CrAg titre is available (this is not routinely performed in South Africa’s national
CrAg screening programme), patients with CrAg titres > 160 may be considered at high
risk of CM or cryptococcal disease-related death.
20,21
Such patients should be carefully monitored for CM signs/symptoms or considered for
empirical CM treatment. Community adherence support is recommended for all patients
who screen CrAg-positive and are followed up as outpatients, particularly among those
who decline an LP.
5
FIGURE 1
Cryptococcal antigen screening and treatment algorithm.
Management of a positive blood cryptococcal antigen result obtained after antiretroviral
treatment initiation
Current same-day HIV test-and-treat strategies mean that some patients may start ART
before a positive reflex blood CrAg result is received. Given the increased risk of
mortality associated with early ART in CM,
22
the panel recommends immediate referral for LP and CSF analysis in all patients with
a positive blood CrAg test who initiated ART in the 4 weeks prior to the CrAg test.
Among patients with a negative CSF CrAg test (i.e. in whom CM is excluded), ART can
be continued and fluconazole pre-emptive therapy should be initiated. Among patients
on a new ART regimen with a positive CSF CrAg test (i.e. a new diagnosis of CM), data
suggest that mortality may be increased if CM is diagnosed in the first 4 weeks of
ART, possibly mediated through a mechanism of unmasking immune reconstitution inflammatory
syndrome (IRIS).
23
Not all studies have demonstrated this and we do not know if ART interruption would
reduce this mortality risk. Potential harms of ART interruption include HIV resistance
(more likely with NNRTI-based regimens but less likely with dolutegravir-based regimens)
and the risk of HIV disease progression and other opportunistic infections. The panel
thought that there was clinical equipoise for the decision whether to continue or
stop ART in this group, and we therefore do not, at this stage, recommend ART interruption.
This remains a research question.
Prior cryptococcal meningitis
Patients with a history of CM do not need to be routinely screened. Cerebrospinal
fluid and blood specimens may remain CrAg-positive for months to years after a CM
diagnosis and successful treatment of cryptococcal disease and therefore if these
tests are positive in the absence of symptoms and signs, this is not an indication
of relapse. However, if a patient with prior CM is screened, found to be CrAg-positive
and has new symptoms or signs of meningitis, a full evaluation should be undertaken
for relapse disease (refer to Recommendations 2 and 7). If the patient does not have
new symptoms or signs of meningitis, the clinician should ensure that the patient
receives adequate fluconazole maintenance therapy (refer to Recommendation 3).
Pregnancy or breastfeeding mothers
Cryptococcal antigen-positive patients who are pregnant should be offered an LP before
a decision is made regarding management. If the patient has laboratory evidence of
CM, she should be treated for CM with standard treatment.
24,25
In a pregnant CrAg-positive patient without laboratory-confirmed CM or an asymptomatic
woman who declines an LP, the patient should be counselled regarding the risks and
benefits of fluconazole treatment. Fluconazole has rarely been associated with human
teratogenicity when administered in the first trimester, particularly at higher doses
(≥ 400 mg/day). However, patients with a positive blood CrAg test treated with ART
and no fluconazole have a substantial risk of progression to meningitis, which has
a high mortality. The panel therefore recommends that pregnant women should be counselled
that the benefits of fluconazole outweigh the risks in this situation. An option that
could be considered in women who are in the first trimester of pregnancy is to treat
with fluconazole 200 mg daily until the second trimester. All women exposed to fluconazole
in the first trimester should be referred for a high-resolution ultrasound scan before
20 weeks of gestation to detect congenital abnormalities. For mothers who are breastfeeding,
consultation with an experienced medical practitioner is also recommended as fluconazole
is present at concentrations similar to maternal plasma concentrations in breast milk
and can be transmitted in large amounts through breast milk to the infant.
26
Clinical liver disease
Patients with a history of liver disease or with evidence of clinical liver disease
deserve careful monitoring of serum liver enzyme and bilirubin levels (with specialist
referral if there is a rising trend, or if jaundice develops) because fluconazole
may cause liver injury.
27
Consultation with a medical practitioner experienced in the care of HIV-seropositive
patients is recommended.
Recommendation 2: Laboratory diagnosis and monitoring
Background
Cryptococcus neoformans is the most commonly detected pathogen causing meningitis
in South Africa.
28
All HIV-seropositive adults and adolescents with clinically suspected meningitis or
a positive blood CrAg test should be investigated for CM. HIV-seropositive children
aged < 5 years are considered to have advanced HIV and, if symptomatic, should also
be investigated for CM.
3
Patients with CM usually seek care with symptoms and signs related to inflamed meninges
(including neck stiffness), raised intracranial pressure (including headache, confusion,
altered level of consciousness, sixth cranial nerve palsies with diplopia and visual
impairment and papilloedema) and encephalitis (including memory loss and new-onset
psychiatric symptoms).
29
Cutaneous lesions and pulmonary involvement (including cavitation, nodular infiltrates
and consolidation) may also occur. Symptomatic relapses are common and are most often
because of inadequate or premature cessation of maintenance fluconazole treatment.
30
The incidence of CM is much lower among children
15
; children with CM may present with an acute onset of illness and focal neurological
signs may be less common (Table 2).
TABLE 2
Summary of recommendation 2.
Scenario
Sub-recommendations
Diagnosis of first episode of suspected CM
All HIV-seropositive adults and adolescents with clinically suspected meningitis or
a positive blood CrAg test should be investigated for CM. HIV-seropositive children
aged < 5 years are considered to have advanced HIV and, if symptomatic, should also
be investigated for CM.
An LP should be performed to obtain CSF which should be submitted to a laboratory
for a CrAg test and fungal culture.
If laboratory facilities are unavailable, a CrAg lateral flow assay may be performed
at the bedside on CSF.
If opening pressure was not measured at the time of diagnostic LP, an LP should be
repeated to measure the pressure once a diagnosis of CM is confirmed – refer to Recommendation
6.
We do not recommend baseline CSF CrAg titre or antifungal susceptibility testing.
Diagnosis of CM if LP is not immediately available or if focal neurological signs
are present
Serum/plasma/finger prick whole blood may be tested for CrAg to determine if the patient
has disseminated cryptococcal disease.
Patients with a positive blood CrAg test and symptoms/signs of meningitis should be
empirically started on antifungal treatment (Figure 1, Recommendation 3) and referred
to a centre where LP can be performed. A CT brain scan should be obtained if there
are neurological contraindications to immediate LP.
Diagnosis of subsequent episode of suspected CM
The patient should be assessed clinically for signs and symptoms of meningitis.
An LP should be performed to obtain CSF which should be submitted to a laboratory
for prolonged fungal culture (minimum 14 days) (Note – India ink and CrAg tests are
not useful for the diagnosis of subsequent episodes of cryptococcal meningitis as
they can stay positive for a prolonged period despite successful treatment).
Opening pressure should be measured.
Antifungal susceptibility testing should be considered if the CSF fungal culture is
positive and other causes for symptomatic relapse are excluded.
Monitoring response to antifungal treatment
Resolution of symptoms and signs can be used to monitor response to treatment.
Unless there is a specific indication (e.g. persistent symptoms or signs suggesting
ongoing or late-onset raised intracranial pressure), LP should not be routinely performed
after 7–14 days of antifungal treatment to document conversion of CSF from culture-positive
to culture-negative.†
CSF and serum/plasma CrAg titres should not be monitored.
Suspected antifungal-resistant isolate
Consider antifungal susceptibility testing if a patient has a relapse episode and
the causes listed in Table 10 have been excluded (Recommendation 7).
Fluconazole MICs should be determined at an academic/reference laboratory and interpreted
by an experienced clinical microbiologist in conjunction with clinical findings.
Screening for cryptococcal antigenaemia
Refer to Recommendation 1.
CM, cryptococcal meningitis; LP, lumbar puncture; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; CrAg,
cryptococcal antigen; LFA, lateral flow assay; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentration;
CT, computed tomography.
†
, If symptoms re-appear or persist during induction treatment, LP should be repeated
to re-measure the opening pressure, which may increase despite successful CSF sterilisation
– refer to Recommendation 6.
Detailed recommendations
Diagnosis of a first episode of cryptococcal meningitis
An LP is required to confirm the diagnosis and establish the aetiology of suspected
meningitis. Lumbar puncture may also alleviate symptoms that are a direct result of
raised intracranial pressure. For a suspected first episode of CM, CSF should be submitted
to the laboratory for a CrAg test and fungal culture. India ink test is not recommended
as the only rapid test because of its lower sensitivity (78% compared to CSF CrAg
test).
31
If a CSF India ink test is performed and found negative, the laboratory should either
perform a CSF CrAg test or refer the specimen for this test. A CrAg LFA is the preferred
format of testing; there are now several kits on the market although the innovator
product (IMMY, Norman, OK) has been most widely studied in pre-clinical and clinical
evaluations,
5,17,32
and the accuracy of other assays is still unclear. Cryptococcus neoformans can be
cultured from CSF within 72 h among patients with a first episode of CM. Cryptococcus
gattii is occasionally confirmed on culture (2% of all cases in South Africa) and
these infections should be managed as for C. neoformans among HIV-seropositive patients.
33
There is no need to routinely order a baseline CSF CrAg titre because most patients
are diagnosed when the CSF fungal burden is already high and the antifungal regimens
for a first episode are standardised and not influenced by the CrAg titre (refer to
Recommendation 3). A point-of-care CrAg LFA may be performed on CSF at the bedside
if laboratory facilities are not immediately available.
34
Antifungal susceptibility testing should not be routinely requested for a first episode
because the vast majority of antifungal minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) are
low at first diagnosis and, even if elevated, the relevance is difficult to interpret
in this setting.
35
If opening pressure was not measured at the time of diagnostic LP, an LP should be
repeated to measure the pressure once a diagnosis of CM is confirmed (refer to Recommendation
6). Cerebrospinal fluid obtained from therapeutic LPs during the course of a hospital
admission should not be routinely submitted for laboratory analysis because this is
a waste of resources and does not impact on treatment management.
Diagnosis of cryptococcal meningitis if focal neurological signs are present or if
lumbar puncture is not immediately available
Focal neurological signs are relatively uncommon in CM, except for a sixth cranial
nerve palsy. Where focal neurological signs are present, a computed tomography (CT)
brain scan should be performed before LP to exclude the presence of space-occupying
lesions. If a CT brain scan cannot be performed immediately in the case of focal neurological
signs or if an LP is not immediately available to make a diagnosis of meningitis,
serum/plasma/whole blood may be tested for CrAg to determine if the patient has disseminated
cryptococcal disease. Patients with a positive blood CrAg test and symptoms and signs
of meningitis are very likely to have CM and should be started empirically on antifungal
treatment (refer to Recommendation 3). Patients without focal neurological signs should
then be referred to a centre where LP can be performed, while patients with focal
neurological signs need to have a CT brain scan performed first followed by an LP
(if this is not contraindicated by CT brain findings). Although the expert panel is
aware that it may be difficult to access a CT brain scan in rural settings, the panel
recommends that there should be urgent referral for a CT scan before LP in blood CrAg-positive
patients with focal neurologic signs, whenever possible.
Diagnosis of a subsequent episode of cryptococcal meningitis
A careful history should be taken including dates of previous episodes of CM and the
patient should be assessed clinically for signs and symptoms of meningitis. An LP
is indicated if the patient has signs and symptoms of meningitis. Cerebrospinal fluid
should be submitted for fungal culture, with plates incubated for at least 14 days
to detect slow fungal growth. Rapid tests are not useful for the diagnosis of subsequent
episodes because both CSF India ink and CSF/blood CrAg tests may remain positive for
months to years even if treatment has been successful. Antifungal susceptibility testing
may be considered for a first relapse episode (see below and refer to Recommendation
7).
Monitoring response to treatment
Resolution of symptoms and signs should be used to monitor the response to treatment.
An LP should not be routinely performed after 7 (or 14) days of induction antifungal
treatment to document conversion of CSF from culture-positive to culture-negative
because the expert panel advises routinely changing from induction to consolidation
phase treatment at 14 days. Given that a fungal culture result may take up to 14 days
to become available, the culture result will not affect the timing of this change.
If symptoms persist or recur during induction or at day 7 or 14, an LP should be repeated
to re-measure the opening pressure, which may increase despite successful CSF sterilisation.
There is no evidence to support extending the duration of induction treatment. The
patient should be investigated for other causes of a poor clinical response, the most
common being raised intracranial pressure. Patients with raised intracranial pressure
should be managed according to Recommendation 6. Daily therapeutic lumbar puncture,
and a CT brain scan if possible, is advised. If the cause of a poor clinical response
cannot be found, consider referral to a secondary or tertiary centre for review unless
the patient’s prognosis is already deemed to be very poor. Cerebrospinal fluid CrAg
tests may remain positive for months to years and CrAg titres are not recommended
to be routinely measured to monitor the response to treatment. Blood CrAg titres are
also not useful to monitor the response to treatment for both CM and asymptomatic
antigenaemia.
36,37
Suspected antifungal-resistant isolates
Antifungal susceptibility testing should be considered if the patient has a relapse
episode and the causes listed in Table 10 have been excluded. Isolates with elevated
fluconazole MICs have been described from relapse episodes – especially where fluconazole
monotherapy is initially given – and are unusual if amphotericin B-based induction
treatment was administered during the first episode.
35,38
Because there are no established clinical breakpoints for C. neoformans and fluconazole,
it is useful to test isolates from the initial and subsequent episodes in parallel
in an academic or reference laboratory and document a fourfold (double dilution) change
in MIC that may suggest resistance.
25
This requires that the initial isolate is stored, which may not always be possible
at a diagnostic laboratory. Minimum inhibitory concentrations should be interpreted
by an experienced clinical microbiologist in conjunction with the clinical history.
In the absence of paired isolates, epidemiologic cut-off values can be applied to
distinguish wild-type and mutant strains.
39
Refer to Recommendation 7 for the management of patients with fluconazole-resistant
isolates. Non-susceptibility to amphotericin B is very unusual and susceptibility
testing for this antifungal agent should not be performed. Flucytosine resistance
develops with monotherapy; hence, combination treatment is always recommended.
40
Baseline flucytosine MIC testing is not routinely recommended at present.
Recommendation 3: Management of a first episode of cryptococcal meningitis
Detailed recommendations
The antifungal treatment of HIV-associated CM is divided into three phases: induction,
consolidation and maintenance (Table 3).
TABLE 3
Summary of recommendation 3.
Phase
Duration
Treatment
Induction
2 weeks
Preferred regimen: 1 week of amphotericin B deoxycholate (1 mg/kg/day) and flucytosine
(100 mg/kg/day divided into four doses per day), followed by 1 week of fluconazole
(1200 mg daily for adults; 12 mg/kg/day for children and adolescents up to a maximum
of 800 mg daily)
Alternative options
2 weeks of fluconazole (1200 mg daily for adults; 12 mg/kg/day for children and adolescents)
and flucytosine (100 mg/kg/day divided into four doses per day)
Preferred option if flucytosine is unavailable: 2 weeks of amphotericin B deoxycholate
(1 mg/kg/day) and fluconazole (1200 mg daily for adults, 12 mg/kg/day for children
and adolescents)
If liposomal amphotericin B is available for patients with renal dysfunction: 1 week
of liposomal amphotericin B (3 mg/kg/day – 4 mg/kg/day) and flucytosine (100 mg/kg/day
divided into four doses per day), followed by 1 week of fluconazole (both fluconazole
and flucytosine doses adjusted for renal impairment)
Consolidation
8 weeks
Fluconazole (800 mg daily for adults; 12 mg/kg/day for children and adolescents up
to a maximum of 800 mg daily)
Maintenance
Continue for at least 12 months until a single CD4 count > 200 cells/µL and a suppressed
HIV viral load
Fluconazole (200 mg daily for adults; 6 mg/kg/day for children and adolescents up
to a maximum of 200 mg daily)
Induction phase (2 weeks)
The WHO recommends that the first choice for induction phase treatment is amphotericin
B 1 mg/kg/day and flucytosine 100 mg/kg/day divided into four doses per day.
4
Flucytosine is not currently registered in South Africa or any other African country.
10,41
A flucytosine product manufactured in Poland was acquired by Mylan in 2016. Despite
previously lapsed registration in South Africa and approval by the WHO Pre-Qualification
Program, the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) requires
a full dossier to be submitted. The panel and the Southern African HIV Clinicians
Society support advocacy efforts to provide greater access to flucytosine through
fast-track SAHPRA registration and development of additional generic products, particularly
in light of the findings of the recently published Advancing Cryptococcal Treatment
in Africa (ACTA) trial.
8,10,41,42
This trial demonstrated a substantial mortality reduction among participants randomised
to flucytosine-based combination therapies (Table 4). Overall, the best-performing
treatment arm in the ACTA trial was the 1-week combination of amphotericin B deoxycholate
and flucytosine, followed by high-dose oral fluconazole in the second week. This regimen
was also associated with fewer adverse effects, specifically a reduction in amphotericin
B deoxycholate-related nephrotoxicity and anaemia, and lower costs. This is the preferred
regimen recommended by the panel. Both the all-oral fluconazole/flucytosine regimen
and 1-week amphotericin B deoxycholate/flucytosine regimen were non-inferior to the
previous gold standard (i.e. 2 weeks of amphotericin B and flucytosine) in terms of
2-week mortality. The all-oral regimen is useful in cases where a delay in administration
of amphotericin B deoxycholate is expected or its use is contraindicated. The panel
now also recommends a higher induction dose of fluconazole (1200 mg daily) based on
doses used in the ACTA trial. There is no evidence from fluconazole monotherapy trials
to suggest an increased toxicity at this higher dose.
43,44
If flucytosine is unavailable, the preferred treatment option is 2 weeks of amphotericin
B and fluconazole (not 1 week of amphotericin B and fluconazole) because the 2-week
regimen was associated with lower 2- and 10-week mortality rates than 1 week of this
drug combination in the ACTA trial (Table 4). In settings with access to liposomal
amphotericin B, this antifungal may be used instead of the deoxycholate formulation,
especially among patients with renal impairment. Although there is no evidence of
improved efficacy compared to amphotericin B deoxycholate, liposomal amphotericin
B is associated with fewer adverse effects and may be available at a reduced cost
for CM in some countries.
45,46
In countries where amphotericin B is unavailable, the panel advises clinicians to
follow the WHO guideline with respect to high-dose fluconazole options.
4
In South Africa, all patients with CM should be treated with an amphotericin B-based
induction regimen unless there is a specific contraindication to this.
TABLE 4
Unadjusted 2- and 10-week mortality outcomes for the five combination treatment regimens
in the Advancing Cryptococcal Treatment in Africa trial.
Regimen
2-week mortality
10-week mortality
n/N
%
95% CI
n/N
%
95% CI
One-week amphotericin B and flucytosine (short course)
13/113
11.6
5.7–17.5
27/113
24.2
16.2–32.1
Two-week fluconazole and flucytosine (all-oral regimen)
41/225
18.2
13.2–23.3
79/225
35.1
28.9–41.3
Two-week amphotericin B and flucytosine
24/115
20.9
13.4–28.3
44/115
38.3
29.4–47.2
Two-week amphotericin B and fluconazole
25/114
21.9
14.3–29.5
47/114
41.3
32.3–50.4
One-week amphotericin B and fluconazole
36/111
32.4
23.7–41.1
54/111
48.6
39.4–57.9
CI, confidence interval; n/N, number of deaths divided by number of participants in
that trial arm.
Consolidation phase (further 8 weeks)
The panel recommends a fluconazole dose of 800 mg daily for 8 weeks. This recommendation
is based on expert opinion.
Maintenance phase (secondary prophylaxis)
The panel recommends fluconazole 200 mg daily for at least 10 more months (i.e. to
complete a total of 12 months of antifungal treatment). Maintenance fluconazole should
only be stopped when the CD4 count is documented to be > 200 cells/µL (on one occasion
is sufficient) and the most recent HIV viral load is suppressed.
Adolescents and children
During the induction phase, amphotericin B should be prescribed at a daily dose of
1 mg/kg/day and flucytosine as a (divided) daily dose of 100 mg/kg/day (Table 5).
Fluconazole doses should also be calculated by body weight: induction phase: 12 mg/kg/day
(up to 800 mg daily); consolidation phase: 6 mg/kg/day – 12 mg/kg/day (up to 800 mg
daily); and maintenance phase: 6 mg/kg/day (up to 200 mg daily).
TABLE 5
Flucytosine dosing in children and adults with normal renal function.
Lower weight limit (kg)
Upper weight limit (kg)
Number of pills
Total dose (mg)
Daily dose for lower weight limit (mg/kg)
Daily dose for upper weight limit (mg/kg)
Dose 1†
Dose 2†
Dose 3†
Dose 4†
20
24
4
2000
100.00
83.33
1
1
1
1
25
29
5
2500
100.00
86.21
2
1
1
1
30
34
6
3000
100.00
88.24
2
1
2
1
35
39
7
3500
100.00
89.74
2
2
2
1
40
44
8
4000
100.00
90.91
2
2
2
2
45
49
9
4500
100.00
91.84
3
2
2
2
50
54
10
5000
100.00
92.59
3
2
3
2
55
59
11
5500
100.00
93.22
3
3
3
2
60
64
12
6000
100.00
93.75
3
3
3
3
65
69
13
6500
100.00
94.20
4
3
3
3
70
74
14
7000
100.00
94.59
4
3
4
3
75
79
15
7500
100.00
94.94
4
4
4
3
80
84
16
8000
100.00
95.24
4
4
4
4
†
, Number of 500 mg pills per dose.
Renal impairment (creatinine clearance < 50 mL/min)
If there is renal impairment at the time of diagnosis of CM with a calculated creatinine
clearance of 30 mL/min – 50 mL/min, the recommended induction regimens are the following:
If liposomal amphotericin B is available, switch to 1 week of liposomal amphotericin
B (3 mg/kg/day – 4 mg/kg/day) and flucytosine, followed by 1 week of fluconazole (both
fluconazole and flucytosine dose adjusted according to creatinine clearance) (Table
6).
One week of amphotericin B deoxycholate (1 mg/kg/day) and flucytosine (dose adjusted
according to creatinine clearance), followed by 1 week of fluconazole (dose adjusted
according to creatinine clearance) (Table 6).
TABLE 6
Induction therapy doses of flucytosine, fluconazole and amphotericin B adjusted according
to estimated glomerular filtration rates for adults.
Antifungal agent
eGFR > 50
eGFR 10–50
eGFR < 10
Haemodialysis
Amphotericin B deoxycholate
1 mg/kg
1 mg/kg
1 mg/kg
1 mg/kg (can administer during dialysis)
Fluconazole
1200 mg daily
600 mg daily
600 mg daily
600 mg daily; dose after dialysis
Flucytosine
25 mg/kg 6 hourly
25 mg/kg 12 hourly
25 mg/kg daily
25 mg/kg daily; dose after dialysis
Source: The Sanford guide to antimicrobial therapy 2019 / editors, David N. Gilbert,
M.D., George M. Eliopoulos, M.D., Henry F. Chambers, M.D., Michael S. Saag, M.D.,
Andrew T. Pavia, M.D. Sperryville, VA, USA: Antimicrobial Therapy, Inc., [2019]
Note: Multiply by 0.85 for women. Children: CrCL 20 mL/min – 40 mL/min: flucytosine
25 mg/kg q12h; 10 mL/min – 20 mL/min: flucytosine 25 mg/kg q24 h; < 10 mL/min: flucytosine
25 mg/kg q24–48h. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is a key indicator of renal function.
Estimated GFR (eGFR) is a mathematically derived entity based on a patient’s serum
creatinine level, age, sex and race. Creatinine clearance (CrCL), an estimate of GFR,
can be estimated in adults using the Cockcroft–Gault equation: [[140-age (years)]*weight
(kg)] / [0.8136*serum creatinine (µmol/L)].
If there is renal impairment at baseline with a creatinine clearance of < 30 mL/min
or a deterioration in renal function, the recommended induction regimens are the following:
If liposomal amphotericin B is available, 1 week of liposomal amphotericin B (3 mg/kg/day
– 4 mg/kg/day) and flucytosine, followed by 1 week of fluconazole (both fluconazole
and flucytosine dose adjusted according to creatinine clearance).
Two weeks of fluconazole (dose adjusted according to creatinine clearance) and flucytosine
(dose adjusted according to creatinine clearance).
If neither flucytosine nor liposomal amphotericin B is available, administer a single
dose of amphotericin B deoxycholate (0.7 mg/kg) and daily fluconazole (dose adjusted
according to creatinine clearance) and monitor creatinine clearance daily. Administer
amphotericin B deoxycholate (0.7 mg/kg) on alternate days if the creatinine clearance
remains static and give as many doses as possible over the 2-week induction period.
Important practice point
Clinicians should be very clear when prescribing liposomal amphotericin B versus amphotericin
B deoxycholate. The daily doses are different.
Intravenous fluids should be administered to all patients. Tenofovir and amphotericin
B deoxycholate can be used together provided the patient’s renal function is normal
and serum creatinine does not double on treatment. Among patients with renal impairment,
ART regimens containing tenofovir should be adjusted, switching to an alternative
antiretroviral agent such as abacavir. If the patient’s initial reason for a reduced
creatinine clearance was dehydration and this has been corrected with fluid administration,
the patient can be switched back to amphotericin B deoxycholate at normal doses. Flucytosine
has a short plasma half-life and is cleared unchanged via the kidneys. Flucytosine
requires dose adjustment if there is renal impairment; where patients are dialysed,
it should be given after dialysis (Table 6). Fluconazole monotherapy is not recommended
except as a last resort. When used as monotherapy during induction, the fluconazole
dose is 1200 mg daily with normal renal function. With a creatinine clearance of <
50 mL/min, the induction dose of fluconazole should be reduced by 50% to 600 mg daily.
Management of other forms of disseminated cryptococcosis
Cryptococcal fungaemia (i.e. a positive blood culture) should be managed as per CM.
The treatment of cryptococcomas, pulmonary cryptococcosis and other forms of culture-confirmed
disseminated cryptococcal disease is beyond the scope of this guideline. Readers are
advised to consult the 2010 Infectious Diseases Society of America guideline.
25
Patients on tuberculosis treatment
The panel does not recommend a fluconazole dose increase among patients receiving
rifampicin because the induction of fluconazole metabolism by rifampicin causes only
moderate reductions in fluconazole exposure and because of the high doses of fluconazole
that are now being recommended for induction and consolidation treatment.
8,47
Adjunctive corticosteroid therapy
The expert panel advises against adjunctive corticosteroid therapy in the initial
management of CM.
9
Refer to Recommendation 7 for the use of corticosteroids among patients with IRIS.
Immunological failure on antiretroviral treatment
If patients with priorly treated CM develop immunological failure on ART and their
CD4 count drops below 200 cells/µL after secondary prophylaxis has been stopped, the
panel advises restarting fluconazole at 200 mg daily. This may be considered for patients
with priorly treated cryptococcal antigenaemia too. Refer to the Maintenance phase
(secondary prophylaxis) for duration of treatment.
Non-adherence to maintenance treatment
Among patients who stop taking fluconazole maintenance prematurely and then return
for care but are asymptomatic, the panel advises simply restarting fluconazole 200
mg daily and monitoring closely for recurrence of meningitis. Symptomatic patients
should be fully investigated for CM. Community adherence support for ART and fluconazole
should be arranged. Refer to the Maintenance phase (secondary prophylaxis) for duration
of treatment.
Analgesia
Therapeutic LPs are the best form of ‘analgesia’ for headaches associated with raised
intracranial pressure. Paracetamol can be used but not non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs) because of the nephrotoxicity concerns with amphotericin B deoxycholate.
Morphine may also be appropriate and is not contraindicated in the presence of raised
intracranial pressure.
Recommendation 4: Amphotericin B and flucytosine toxicity prevention, monitoring and
management
Background
Amphotericin B deoxycholate-related toxicities
Major adverse effects of amphotericin B deoxycholate include acute kidney injury (AKI)
(caused by renal vasoconstriction and acute tubular necrosis) usually in the second
week of therapy, hypokalaemia, hypomagnesaemia, anaemia, febrile reactions and chemical
phlebitis.
48
Acute kidney injury and electrolyte abnormalities may be prevented by pre-hydration,
by avoiding concurrent use of other nephrotoxins (e.g. NSAIDs and aminoglycosides)
and by routine administration of potassium and magnesium supplements. Phlebitis is
very common among patients receiving amphotericin B and increases the risk of localised
cellulitis as well as sepsis. Anaemia commonly occurs among patients receiving amphotericin
B and can be clinically significant particularly among those with a low baseline haemoglobin
level. Decreases in haemoglobin of greater than 2 g/dL occurred in 50% – 71% of patients
over 2 weeks’ treatment in an individual-level analysis of data from several trials.
49
It is important to also exclude other treatable causes of anaemia and consider transfusion
among symptomatic patients. It should be noted that both the nephrotoxic effect of
amphotericin B deoxycholate and the decrease in haemoglobin are less commonly observed
when using the preferred regimen of 1-week amphotericin B combined with flucytosine
compared to regimens using 2 weeks of amphotericin B (Table 7).
8
TABLE 7
Summary of recommendation 4.
Scenario
Sub-recommendations
Administration of amphotericin B deoxycholate†
Amphotericin B powder should be reconstituted in sterile water; inject the calculated
volume of reconstituted antifungal in water into 1 L of 5% dextrose water and administer
within 24 h
Amphotericin B can be administered via a peripheral intravenous (IV) line if the solution
contains ≤ 0.1 mg of amphotericin B per 1 mL of 5% dextrose water
A test dose is unnecessary
The solution should be infused over at least 4 h
Administration of flucytosine
Flucytosine is available as 500 mg tablets
With normal renal function, the dose is 100 mg/kg/day per os in four divided doses
Therapeutic monitoring of serum levels is not recommended at this dose
Prevention of amphotericin B deoxycholate-related toxicities
Adults should be pre-hydrated with 1 L of normal saline containing 1 ampoule of potassium
chloride (20 mmol) infused over 2 h before the amphotericin B infusion‡
Twice daily oral potassium and daily oral magnesium supplementation should be administered
to adults
To minimise the risk of phlebitis, lines should be flushed with normal saline immediately
after the amphotericin B infusion is complete and the infusion bag should not be left
attached to the intravenous administration set after the infusion is complete
Prevention of flucytosine-related toxicity
Drug accumulation and increased risk for toxicity occurs with renal dysfunction. The
dose therefore needs to be carefully adjusted according to the estimated glomerular
filtration rate
Monitoring of patients receiving amphotericin B and flucytosine
Days 0, 3 and 7: creatinine and potassium (and magnesium, if available)
Days 0 and 7: full blood count (with a differential count if available). Day 3: full
blood count and differential can be considered when flucytosine is used, especially
if baseline abnormalities exist. Flucytosine may cause bone marrow suppression but
this is uncommonly observed with short duration of use and the current suggested dosing
schedule
Fluid input and output monitoring
Management of amphotericin B-related toxicities
Refer to Recommendation 3 (baseline renal impairment section)
Febrile reactions can be treated with paracetamol 1 g 30 min before infusion (if severe,
hydrocortisone 25 mg IV can be given before subsequent infusions)
Management of flucytosine-related toxicities
If grade 4 neutropenia or if any neutropenia-related complications develop, reduce
the flucytosine dose and repeat a neutrophil count immediately. If neutropenia is
confirmed, stop the flucytosine and switch to fluconazole. If the patient was being
treated with amphotericin B and flucytosine, consider a second week of amphotericin
B deoxycholate treatment.
†
, For adolescents and children, doses should be calculated by body weight;
‡
, For children and adolescents, normal saline, with 1 ampoule of potassium chloride
(20 mmol) added per litre of fluid, should be infused at 10 mL/kg – 15 mL/kg over
2–4 h (not more than 1 L) prior to amphotericin B administration. If saline is unavailable,
then other parenteral rehydration solutions, for example, Darrow’s solution or Ringer’s
lactate, that already contain potassium can be used.
Flucytosine-related toxicities
Flucytosine is associated with bone marrow toxicity and resultant anaemia, neutropenia
and thrombocytopenia. This was observed particularly in early studies when flucytosine
was used at high doses for prolonged periods of time.
50,51,52
The reported prevalence of toxicity from recent trials, using lower doses for shorter
periods, has been much lower. In the ACTA trial, the preferred regimen of 1-week amphotericin
B combined with flucytosine 100 mg/kg/day was not associated with an increase in severe
neutropenia compared to flucytosine-free regimens.
8
The bioavailability of oral flucytosine was reduced among Thai patients with advanced
HIV disease compared to the intravenous formulation, minimising toxicity but with
no demonstrated difference in early fungicidal activity.
53
For these reasons, therapeutic monitoring of serum levels is not recommended in the
setting of HIV-related CM. Flucytosine plasma clearance is closely related to creatinine
clearance and flucytosine thus accumulates with impaired renal function; this may
lead to increased risk of toxicity. Close monitoring of renal function and appropriate
dose adjustment according to estimated creatinine clearance are therefore essential.
54
Detailed recommendations
Administration
Amphotericin B deoxycholate: Amphotericin B deoxycholate powder (50 mg vials) should
be refrigerated between 2 °C and 8 °C and protected from light.
55
The total daily dose of amphotericin B is calculated based on a dose of 1 mg/kg/day;
amphotericin B deoxycholate powder from each 50 mg vial should be aseptically reconstituted
in 10 mL of sterile water. The calculated volume of the concentrate (i.e. reconstituted
drug in sterile water) should be injected into a 1 L bag of 5% dextrose water and
shaken to mix well. Amphotericin B deoxycholate should never be mixed with normal
saline or half-normal saline as it will precipitate. Once mixed, the solution, containing
≤ 0.1 mg of amphotericin B per 1 mL of 5% dextrose water for infusion through a peripheral
intravenous line, must be infused within 24 h of preparation, or else it should be
discarded.
55
A test dose is not recommended and protection of the solution from light with a brown
bag is unnecessary.
55
The line that is used for amphotericin B infusion should not be used to simultaneously
administer other medications. The solution should be infused over 4 h or more (infusion
< 4 h can result in cardiac complications). Once the infusion is complete, the line
should be flushed immediately with normal saline.
Flucytosine: Flucytosine (500 mg tablets) should be stored below 25 °C in a cool,
dry area. With normal renal function, the total daily dose is 100 mg/kg/day given
in four divided doses (i.e. every 6 h) per os (Table 5). Nausea and vomiting may occur
and can be attenuated by administering flucytosine tablets individually during a 15-min
window or by pre-medication with anti-emetics.
Prevention of toxicities
Amphotericin B deoxycholate
Patients should be pre-hydrated with 1 L of normal saline containing 1 ampoule of
potassium chloride (20 mmol K+ per 10 mL ampoule) infused over 2 h before administration
of amphotericin B deoxycholate. This reduces renal toxicity and hypokalaemia. Patients
should be given 1200 mg potassium chloride orally twice daily (equivalent to 16 mmol
of oral potassium, e.g. two Slow-K 600 mg tablets twice daily, 8 mmol K+ per tablet)
and up to 1500 mg magnesium chloride orally daily (e.g. two Slow-Mag 535 mg tablets
daily, 5.33 mmol Mg2+ per tablet, or two Ultimag tablets daily, 660 mg Mg2+ with zinc
oxide 6 mg) for the duration of treatment with amphotericin B deoxycholate.
26
Routine pre-emptive potassium supplementation should not be given to patients with
pre-existing renal impairment or hyperkalaemia. To minimise the risk of phlebitis,
lines should be flushed with normal saline immediately after amphotericin B infusion
is complete. The empty bag should not be left attached to the intravenous line. The
intravenous line should be removed if the patient develops a fever after the infusion
or at the first sign of redness or discomfort at the insertion site. Febrile reactions
may occur; in order to prevent recurrence, the infusion should be administered at
a slow rate over the first half hour while observing the patient closely and treatment
such as paracetamol may be required.
Flucytosine
Renal function should be closely monitored especially when flucytosine is combined
with amphotericin B deoxycholate. The dose of flucytosine should be adjusted according
to the estimated creatinine clearance in order to prevent accumulation and increased
toxicity (Table 6).
Laboratory or clinical monitoring
Recommendations depend on the induction regimen (Table 8).
TABLE 8
Laboratory monitoring according to induction regimen used.
Induction regimen
Week 1
Week 2
Laboratory monitoring
Preferred
Amphotericin B deoxycholate + 5-FC
Fluconazole
Day 0: Full blood count and differential, creatinine clearance, potassium, magnesium
Day 3: Full blood count (only if low baseline haemoglobin), creatinine clearance,
potassium, magnesium
Day 7: Full blood count and differential, creatinine clearance, potassium, magnesium
Amphotericin B unavailable
Fluconazole + 5-FC
Fluconazole + 5-FC
Day 0: Full blood count and differential, creatinine clearance
Day 3: Full blood count (if low baseline haemoglobin)
Day 7: Full blood count and differential
Day 10: Full blood count and differential (if any abnormalities previously)
Day 14: Full blood count and differential, creatinine clearance can be done more frequently
if baseline is abnormal
5-FC is unavailable
Amphotericin B deoxycholate + fluconazole
Amphotericin B deoxycholate + fluconazole
Day 0: Creatinine clearance, potassium, magnesium, full blood count
Day 3: Creatinine clearance, potassium, magnesium
Day 7: Creatinine clearance, potassium, magnesium, full blood count
Day 10: Creatinine clearance, potassium, magnesium
Day 14: Creatinine clearance, potassium, magnesium, full blood count
Amphotericin B deoxycholate
At a minimum, baseline and twice weekly monitoring of serum creatinine/potassium and
baseline and weekly monitoring of haemoglobin are recommended for the duration of
amphotericin B deoxycholate treatment. Renal toxicity is more likely to develop in
the second week of treatment in regimens where amphotericin B is used for 2 weeks.
Fluid input and output should be carefully monitored. Chemical phlebitis is often
complicated by infection at the intravenous line insertion site, which can result
in bacteraemia
56
; the insertion site should be monitored by regular clinical examination and febrile
patients with a suspected insertion site infection should be appropriately investigated
and managed.
Flucytosine
Baseline grade 1 neutropenia (defined as an absolute neutrophil count ≤ 1000 cells/mm3)
was documented among 12% of participants enrolled into the Cryptococcal Optimal ART
Timing and Adjunctive Sertraline for the Treatment of HIV-Associated Cryptococcal
Meningitis clinical trials where they received amphotericin B and fluconazole (plus
sertraline in some patients).
57
Patients with baseline grade 1 neutropenia did not have a higher 30-day mortality
compared to those without neutropenia. A baseline full blood/differential count should
be done where available and the risk–benefit ratio of flucytosine therapy should be
considered in the setting of baseline neutropenia. However, we strongly recommend
the use of flucytosine even when there is baseline neutropenia because of the substantial
mortality benefit over alternative regimens. Both amphotericin B and flucytosine are
associated with anaemia and thus serum haemoglobin should be monitored. A full blood
count should be done at least weekly. A baseline differential count should be done
if available and be repeated with subsequent full blood counts. Creatinine clearance
needs to be monitored in order to adjust flucytosine dose. This is particularly important
where baseline renal function impairment exists or where flucytosine is administered
with amphotericin B deoxycholate (Table 6).
Fluconazole
The panel recommends checking alanine transaminase (ALT) levels if symptoms of hepatitis
or jaundice develop while patients are on fluconazole, but routine ALT monitoring
is not indicated.
Management of toxicities
Amphotericin B deoxycholate
For significant hypokalaemia (serum K+ <3.3 mmol/L), additional intravenous replacement
is required: up to 2 ampoules of potassium chloride (20 mmol K+ per 10 mL ampoule)
in 1 L of normal saline 8 hourly. Among those who develop hypokalaemia, serum potassium
should be monitored daily until it is resolved. If hypokalaemia remains uncorrected,
serum magnesium should be checked (if this test is available) and/or oral magnesium
supplementation should be doubled. Intravenous magnesium sulphate may be considered
for persistent hypokalaemia and hypomagnesaemia. If serum creatinine doubles from
baseline, one dose of amphotericin B deoxycholate may be omitted and/or pre-hydration
may be increased to 1 L of normal saline 8 hourly; serum creatinine should then be
monitored daily. If serum creatinine improves, amphotericin B may be restarted at
a dose of 0.7 mg/kg/day and/or alternate-day treatment could be considered. If creatinine
remains elevated or repeatedly rises, liposomal amphotericin B should be substituted
if available or amphotericin B deoxycholate should be stopped and an alternative regimen
should be used (refer to Recommendation 3). If febrile reactions occur with amphotericin
B, paracetamol 1 g may be given 30 min before infusion or, for severe reactions, hydrocortisone
25 mg IV can be administered before subsequent infusions.
22
Flucytosine
Bone marrow suppression is uncommon at the recommended induction flucytosine dose
for 1 week only, especially if renal function is normal (dose adjustment is important
in case of significant renal impairment). Other causes of a low neutrophil count should
also be considered. However, if grade 4 neutropenia (< 400 cells/mm3) develops, then
we recommend to reduce the flucytosine dose and repeat a neutrophil count as soon
as possible. If the neutropenia is confirmed, then withhold flucytosine until counts
recover. If the patient was on the preferred 1-week amphotericin B and flucytosine
regimen, fluconazole may be added to amphotericin B, and extension of amphotericin
B treatment to a second week should be considered.
Recommendation 5: Timing of antiretroviral therapy
Detailed recommendations
Cryptococcal meningitis
The expert panel recommends commencing ART 4–6 weeks after the diagnosis of CM. The
panel strongly advises that ART must not be delayed beyond 6 weeks after diagnosis,
and most members of the panel advise that clinicians should aim to start exactly 4
weeks after diagnosis of CM. Although most patients with CM have advanced immunosuppression
with very low CD4 counts, two randomised clinical trials conducted in sub-Saharan
Africa have shown excess early mortality when ART was commenced while patients were
still receiving induction phase treatment for CM.
22,58
In the later trial conducted in Uganda and South Africa, patients who started ART
1–2 weeks after diagnosis of CM had a 15% higher mortality than those who deferred
ART until 5–6 weeks.
59
Another small trial showed possible excess IRIS in those patients who started ART
early.
60
The in-hospital stay associated with amphotericin B therapy should be used for pre-ART
counselling, identification of a treatment supporter and early referral to an ART
clinic. Clinicians should aim to set up an ART clinic appointment within a week of
discharge from hospital to prevent delays in ART initiation beyond what is advised
in this guideline. Patients initiated on ART should be counselled regarding the risk
of development of IRIS. If a patient is referred to another facility for ART, the
need for fluconazole consolidation or maintenance therapy should be communicated.
The expert panel recommends standard first-line ART regimens among patients with CM.
12
If nephrotoxicity occurred on amphotericin B, the renal function should be checked
before starting ART to ensure that it has improved (to a creatinine clearance of >
60 mL/min) before commencing tenofovir. The panel advises that, among patients who
present with relapse of CM or a first CM episode after interrupting ART, ART should
also be restarted after 4–6 weeks. One situation where ART may be delayed further
is if a patient is still symptomatic with headaches at the visit when ART is about
to be started. In such a situation, a LP should be repeated to measure pressure and
for fungal culture to exclude persistent culture positivity. Antiretroviral treatment
should be deferred and such patients may require further LPs or amphotericin B to
ensure control of symptoms before starting ART (Table 9).
TABLE 9
Summary of recommendation 5.
Scenario
Sub-recommendations
Following a first or relapse episode of CM
Start ART 4–6 weeks after diagnosis of CM. The panel strongly advises that ART must
not be delayed beyond 6 weeks after diagnosis, and most members of the panel advise
that clinicians should aim to start exactly 4 weeks after diagnosis of CM
No adjustment in first-line ART regimen is required for patients who are ART-naïve
(unless renal dysfunction precludes the use of tenofovir)
Following a new diagnosis of cryptococcal antigenaemia
If CM has been excluded, start ART immediately
Asymptomatic CrAg-positive patients who decline consent for LP or for whom LP is contraindicated
should start on ART after at least 2 weeks of antifungal treatment
CM, cryptococcal meningitis; LP, lumbar puncture; ART, antiretroviral treatment.
Cryptococcal antigenaemia
The panel advises starting ART immediately among ART-naïve patients who are blood
CrAg-positive on screening and have an LP that excludes CM (with a caveat that there
is no evidence for this recommendation). Asymptomatic CrAg-positive patients who decline
consent for LP or for whom LP is contraindicated should start ART after at least 2
weeks of antifungal treatment (Figure 1).
Recommendation 6: Management of raised intracranial pressure
Background
Raised intracranial pressure occurs in up to 75% of patients with CM and results from
physical obstruction of CSF outflow through the arachnoid villi/granulations resulting
in build-up of CSF pressure.
61,62
Raised pressure may be present at the diagnosis of CM or develop while the patient
is on treatment and may result in severe headaches, vomiting, confusion or depressed
level of consciousness, ophthalmoplegia (particularly sixth cranial nerve palsies)
and visual disturbance/loss. Clinicians need to consider raised intracranial pressure
and manage appropriately if a patient exhibits these symptoms or signs at any stage
of the management of CM. To alleviate raised pressure, therapeutic LPs are indicated.
New-onset hypertension may be a sign of increased intracranial pressure (i.e. part
of Cushing’s triad) and should prompt an LP to measure opening pressure instead of
anti-hypertensive medications (Box 1).
BOX 1
Summary of recommendation 6.
Sub-recommendations
Measure baseline opening pressure at the time of or shortly after the diagnosis of
CM using a manometer
If opening pressure is > 25 cm H2O (manometer reading), remove 10 mL – 30 mL CSF
Repeat LP whenever there are symptoms or signs of raised intracranial pressure (headache,
vomiting, drowsiness, confusion, sixth cranial nerve palsy, visual disturbance, etc.)
Daily therapeutic LPs may be required
CM, cryptococcal meningitis; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; LP, lumbar puncture.
Detailed recommendations
Measurement of opening pressure
The panel agreed that it is a good practice to measure the CSF opening pressure whenever
a diagnostic LP is performed. However, in practice, the opening pressure may not have
been measured at the initial diagnostic LP. Thus, once the diagnosis of CM is made,
an LP should be repeated to measure CSF opening pressure, particularly if the patient
still has a headache (which is usually the case). The pressure should be measured
using a manometer with the patient lying down and without excessive spinal flexion.
Approximately 15% of patients with initially normal intracranial pressure will develop
raised intracranial pressure during treatment; thus, all patients should be monitored
daily for headache or signs of raised intracranial pressure that should prompt an
LP.
What to do if a manometer is unavailable?
Manometers are not readily available in all centres or settings. In the absence of
a manometer, the CSF pressure can be crudely estimated in various ways:
Drop counting: obtaining ≥ 40 drops of free-flowing CSF in 60 s using a 22-gauge spinal
needle suggests a high CSF pressure.
63
An ‘eyeball test’: a powerful squirt of CSF from the LP needle suggests a high CSF
pressure.
Makeshift manometers from intravenous line sets can be used to estimate opening pressure
in cm H2O although these sets consistently under-estimate the opening pressure.
64
The panel cautions that the above methods may be prone to under-estimating the actual
CSF pressure based on a manometer reading.
Management of raised pressure
If the opening pressure is raised (i.e. a manometer reading > 25 cm H2O), then 10
mL – 30 mL CSF should be drained (to normalise pressure
to
< 20 cm H2O or decrease the pressure by at least 50% – based on repeat measurement
of closing pressure). Then the need for pressure relief should be dictated by recurrence
of symptoms of raised intracranial pressure. Patients may require daily LPs. Where
a manometer is not available and there are clinical symptoms or signs of raised intracranial
pressure, we advise performing an LP and removing 20 mL – 30 mL of CSF. A symptomatic
improvement after the therapeutic LP would support the symptoms having been due to
raised intracranial pressure (patients with raised intracranial pressure typically
experience considerable relief of symptoms following a therapeutic LP). The patient
should then be reviewed on subsequent days for ongoing symptoms and signs of raised
intracranial pressure, which would indicate the need for further therapeutic LPs.
In rare cases, twice daily LPs are required for controlling raised intracranial pressure
in patients with extremely high opening pressures. Patients with persistent pressure
symptoms and measured high opening pressures who fail to respond to daily LPs for
more than 1 week may require lumbar drain insertion or shunting procedures. In such
cases, neurosurgical consultation should be sought.
Recommendation 7: Management of relapse episodes of cryptococcal meningitis
There are several possible reasons for recurrence of symptoms of meningitis among
patients treated for CM. In certain cases, recurrence is caused by microbiological
relapse (although this is very uncommon with good adherence to maintenance fluconazole).
There are situations in which there is a recurrence of symptoms but CSF fungal cultures
are negative. The causes are summarised in Table 10.
TABLE 10
Possible causes of recurrent symptoms and signs of meningitis in cryptococcal meningitis.
Symptoms
Causes
Attributable to CM
CM relapse†
Possible causes of CM relapse (positive fungal culture)Fungal:
Inadequate induction therapy (e.g. suboptimal amphotericin B deoxycholate administration
because of toxicity)
Non-adherence to fluconazole consolidation or maintenance therapy
Fluconazole resistance (uncommon if preferred induction regimens are used)
CNS cryptococcomas or gelatinous pseudocysts (requiring prolonged induction therapy)
Immunological:
ART not initiated 4–6 weeks after CM induction therapy
Immunological failure because of virological failure of ART
Paradoxical IRIS
Features of IRIS (most cases have negative CSF fungal culture)
Occurs weeks to months after ART initiation
Because of an inflammatory response directed at antigens of non-viable fungus
Associated with higher CSF white cell counts, compared to the initial (culture positive)
episode of CM
Frequently accompanied by raised intracranial pressure and can be associated with
focal brain inflammation and/or mass lesions
Persistently elevated ICP
Thought to be mediated by occlusion of arachnoid granulations by fungi and fungal
capsule; this does not necessarily imply CM treatment failure.
Unrelated to CM
New diagnosis
Possible causes:
Tuberculous meningitis
Viral or bacterial meningitis
Space-occupying lesion with cerebral oedema (e.g. tuberculoma, CNS malignancy) or
hydrocephalus
Non-infective (e.g. tension headache)
CM, cryptococcal meningitis; ART, antiretroviral treatment; IRIS, immune reconstitution
inflammatory syndrome; CNS, central nervous system; ICP, intracranial pressure.
†
, Relapse is defined as recurring clinical features of CM because of recurrent or
ongoing C. neoformans growth in the CNS, diagnosed on positive CSF fungal culture.
Initial assessment
When a patient seeks care for a recurrent episode of meningitis, it is not always
possible to immediately be sure what the aetiology is. The initial assessment should
include:
An evaluation of the patient’s adherence to fluconazole consolidation and maintenance
phase treatment (using self-reported and pharmacy refill data).
An enquiry as to whether the patient has recently started ART to support a possible
IRIS diagnosis.
An LP to measure opening pressure, assess CSF inflammation and for a prolonged fungal
culture (request 14 days of incubation in the laboratory) on at least 3 mL – 5 mL
of CSF. There is no role for India ink staining or CSF/blood CrAg assays in establishing
the cause of recurrence as these tests may remain positive for months to years even
in patients after successful treatment – refer to Recommendation 2.
If the CSF is culture-positive and non-adherence does not appear to be the cause,
then fluconazole susceptibility testing should be considered. Susceptibility testing
should be performed in an academic/reference laboratory. The panel recommends this
when there has been at least one documented relapse despite reported good adherence
(Recommendation 2).
If the cause of the recurrence is attributed to non-adherence, then the patient should
be treated as for the first episode (Recommendation 3). The reasons for non-adherence
should be explored and the patient should receive additional adherence counselling,
preferably together with a treatment supporter. If the patient also interrupted ART,
this should be re-initiated 4–6 weeks after induction antifungal treatment is re-started.
Antiretroviral treatment may need to be adjusted if there is a concern that there
has been virological failure.
Paradoxical cryptococcal IRIS occurs among patients treated for cryptococcal disease
who start ART and develop a recurrence or worsening of clinical manifestations of
cryptococcal disease. Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome is thought to be
the result of an immunopathological reaction directed at residual fungal antigens
at sites of disease.
40
IRIS occurs on average 6 weeks after ART is commenced but delayed cases (> 1 year
after ART initiation) have been described.
41
Cryptococcal meningitis IRIS-associated mortality may be substantial.
42
The most frequent manifestation is recurrence of symptoms of meningitis often with
raised intracranial pressure. Typically, the CSF fungal culture is negative at the
time of IRIS presentation – IRIS represents an immunological reaction rather than
a microbiological recurrence. However, in cases where induction therapy was recent
(< 2 months), the CSF fungal culture may still be positive. Other cryptococcal IRIS
manifestations include lymphadenitis and cryptococcomas.
40
In all patients with suspected paradoxical CM-IRIS, an LP should be performed to measure
pressure and obtain a fungal culture incubated for up to 14 days. It is not possible
to make a diagnosis of IRIS with certainty prior to excluding microbiological relapse
on CSF fungal culture.
Suspected cryptococcal meningitis-immune reconstitution inflammatory with mild symptoms
If the symptoms are mild, the panel recommends performing therapeutic LPs if there
is raised intracranial pressure, providing analgesia and increasing the fluconazole
dose to 1200 mg daily with regular review and follow-up of the CSF fungal culture
result. If the CSF fungal culture is subsequently confirmed as negative, the dose
of fluconazole can be reduced to what it was (800 mg or 200 mg daily depending on
the timing of the CM-IRIS event).
Suspected cryptococcal meningitis-immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome with
severe symptoms or clinical deterioration
If patients have severe symptoms or deteriorate with the approach above, the panel
recommends treating with amphotericin B deoxycholate 1 mg/kg/day plus either flucytosine
(100 mg/kg/day divided into four doses per day) or fluconazole 1200 mg daily until
the CSF culture is confirmed as negative. If the CSF culture is still negative after
7 days’ incubation, amphotericin B can be stopped. If the fungal culture is positive
by 7 days, then amphotericin B should be continued for 14 days if it is given with
fluconazole (if it is given with flucytosine, then 7 days is sufficient). Daily therapeutic
LPs may be required if opening pressure is raised. A CT brain scan should be considered
as mass lesions and cerebral oedema can occur with IRIS. Analgesia should be provided.
Among patients with severe IRIS who do not respond to the above treatment, corticosteroids
should be considered: prednisone 1 mg/kg/day or an equivalent dose of dexamethasone
for up to 2 weeks or until clinical improvement occurs, tapered over 2–6 weeks. Longer
treatment may be required depending on the symptom response. The panel recommends
that corticosteroids preferably should be used among patients with IRIS who are documented
to be CSF fungal culture-negative and when other aetiologies (including tuberculous
meningitis [TBM] and neurotropic viral infections) are excluded. However, if there
is life-threatening neurological deterioration, corticosteroids should be started
immediately.
Among patients with meningitis caused by fluconazole-resistant Cryptococcus, subsequent
management should be discussed with a medical practitioner experienced in the treatment
of CM. Such patients should receive induction therapy with amphotericin B again. Consolidation
and maintenance options will depend on the fluconazole MIC and may include high doses
of fluconazole, voriconazole or posaconazole with or without weekly amphotericin B
infusions.
25
Among patients with multiple relapses, it is important to document conversion of CSF
from culture-positive to culture-negative before stopping amphotericin B and such
cases should be discussed with a medical practitioner experienced in CM management
and fluconazole susceptibility testing should be performed.
Distinguishing CM relapse or IRIS from TBM: Immune-suppressed HIV-seropositive adults
are at high risk of disseminated TB, including TBM. Cerebrospinal fluid cell profiles
and protein levels in CM are similar to those seen in TBM.
65
However, a positive CrAg test or fungal culture is diagnostic for CM, and concomitant
TBM is then less likely.
66
All patients with CM relapse or cryptococcal IRIS should have diagnostic tests performed
for concomitant TB with CSF and sputum GeneXpert Ultra assay, urinary lipoarabinomannan
assay and chest radiograph (although pulmonary TB and cryptococcosis are difficult
to distinguish radiologically).