Traditional and emerging antifungal therapies.

Tamra M Arnold, Emily Dotson, George A Sarosi, Chadi A Hage
Author Information
  1. Tamra M Arnold: Division of Clinical Pharmacy, Roudebush VA Medical Center, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.

Abstract

Invasive mycoses continue to be a major problem in the growing population of immunosuppressed patients. More antifungal agents are now available than ever. The options are many, with more efficacies and less toxicity than in the past. These agents differ in terms of spectrum of activity, pharmacologic properties, and indications. In this article we discuss the three major classes of antifungal agents: the polyens, the triazoles, and the echinocandins. The emphasis is placed on their clinical use, side effects, drug interactions, and other practical issues.

MeSH Term

Amphotericin B
Anidulafungin
Antifungal Agents
Caspofungin
Drug Therapy, Combination
Echinocandins
Fluconazole
Humans
Itraconazole
Lipopeptides
Micafungin
Pyrimidines
Triazoles
Voriconazole

Chemicals

Antifungal Agents
Echinocandins
Lipopeptides
Pyrimidines
Triazoles
Itraconazole
posaconazole
Amphotericin B
Fluconazole
Anidulafungin
Caspofungin
Voriconazole
Micafungin

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0antifungalmajoragentsInvasivemycosescontinueproblemgrowingpopulationimmunosuppressedpatientsnowavailableeveroptionsmanyefficacieslesstoxicitypastdiffertermsspectrumactivitypharmacologicpropertiesindicationsarticlediscussthreeclassesagents:polyenstriazolesechinocandinsemphasisplacedclinicalusesideeffectsdruginteractionspracticalissuesTraditionalemergingtherapies

Similar Articles

Cited By