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CASE REPORT
Endogenous Candida endophthalmitis and osteomyelitis associated with CARD9 deficiency
  1. Nicholas Jones1,
  2. Tomaz Garcez2,
  3. William Newman3,
  4. David Denning3
  1. 1Manchester Royal Eye Hospital, Manchester, UK
  2. 2Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
  3. 3University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
  1. Correspondence to Professor Nicholas Jones, nicholas.jones{at}cmft.nhs.uk

Summary

A 25-year-old woman presented with unilateral red eye and visual blur, and was found to have panuveitis with an inflammatory white mass at the macula, initially presumed to be Toxoplasma retinitis. After failure to respond, she underwent vitrectomy, which produced Candida albicans. Despite intraocular and systemic antifungal treatment, she lost all vision in that eye. Two years later, she developed unilateral hip osteomyelitis leading to total hip replacement and also revealing Candida infection. By clinical exome sequencing, she was then found to have caspase recruitment domain 9 (CARD9) deficiency, an autosomal recessive disorder that causes a specific susceptibility to candidal infections. She remains otherwise well but on lifelong fluconazole prophylaxis.

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