thrush Flashcards

1
Q

what is the main fungal organism responsible for VVS

a) candida glabrata
b) candida tropicalis
c) candida albicans
d) candida krusei

A

c) candida albicans - responsible for 80-89% of VVS candida

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2
Q

You are fitting an IUD in the contraception clinic and whilst doing it you notice a thick white discharge and suspect VVC. The patient is asymptomatic. You take VVC swab and this confirms the diagnosis of the presence of candida albicans. What is the best treatment option?

a) stat dose fluconazole 150mg
b) stat dose clotrimazole pessary 500mg PV
c) do nothing - reassure patient, as long as asymptomatic no treatment required
d) nystatin pessary 100,000 units for 14 days

A

c - do nothing; 10-20% of women will harbour candida asymptomatically and they don’t require treatment

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3
Q

What percentage of women with VVS candida will go on to develop recurrent disease?

a) 1%
b) 6%
c) 15%
d) 50%

A

b - 6%

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4
Q

define acute VVS

A

this is the initial episode of vvs candida

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5
Q

what is the definition of recurrent VVS? how many times in a year does a patient need to have had candida for it to be called recurrent VVS

A

recurrent VVS is defined as >= 4 episodes of VVS with at least two episodes being confirmed by microscopy and or culture. And at least one of them being diagnosed on culture showing moderate to heavy growth.

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6
Q

Candida are found on the healthy vagina flora?

True or false

A

True - candida are found on the healthy vaginal flora. only when overgrowth occurs can infection develop

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7
Q

List three risk factors for developing VVC

A
  1. immunodeficiency - in particular MBL deficiency has been found to be linked to VVC
  2. poorly controlled DM
  3. recent (within the last 3 months) use of antibiotics
  4. endogenous or exogenous oestrogen (pregnancy, HRT and possible COCP but weak evidence to support this)
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8
Q

what percentage of women will have at least one episode of VVS candida in their lifetime?

a) 25%
b) 50%
c) 75%
d) 90%

A

c - 75%

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9
Q

name two non-albican species

A

candida glabrata and candida krusei

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10
Q

candida krusei is resistant to which treatment

a) fluconazole
b) nystatin
c) amphoceterin
d) boric acid

A

a - fluconazole

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11
Q

what percentage of women who present thinking they have ‘recurrent thrush’ actually have this diagnosis?

a) 25%
b) 50%
c) 70%
d) 90%

A

b - 50%

only 50% of women who believe they have recurrent thrush actually have it
consider other differential diagnosis e,g. BV, atrophic vaginitis in peri or post-menopausal woman, lichen sclerosis, vulval dermatoses e.g. lichen simplex or eczema

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12
Q

a 55 year old female presents with continuous itch symptoms, her GP has been treating her for thrush with fluconazole as and when she has the symptoms. Looking at her results she has never had a confirmed culture or microscopy result for VVS. She denies any abnormal discharge but a really awful itch that is worse at night. She is not on HRT and is having monthly periods.

On examination - there is no obvious discharge but evidence of pale mucus membranes and visibly loss of architecture to the clitoris.

what is the most likely diagnosis?

a) acute VVS
b) genital eczema
c) recurrent VVS
d) lichen simplex
e) lichen sclerosus

A

e - lichen sclerosus

always consider differential diagnosis especially in women with symptoms of itch failure to improve with treatment.

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13
Q

what are the signs suggestive of acute VVS that you might see on examination?

A

erythema, fissures and excoriation marks
satelite lesions
sometimes oedema of the labia
white thick non offensive discharge

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14
Q

Lydia comes to clinic worried about whether she has an STI. She has had new vaginal discharge for the past week. She describes it as thick white discharge associated with an itch.

What is the best method to confirm the diagnosis?

a) VVS culture
b) VVS dry microscopy
c) VVS NAAT
d) urine MC&S
e) VVS wet microscopy

A

b ) VVS dry microscopy

BASHH guidelines suggest the best method to confirm diagnosis of VVS candida is through microscopy; however if this is not available then consider VVS culture but not necessary for treatment

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15
Q

Lydia comes to clinic worried about whether she has an STI. She has had new vaginal discharge for the past week. She describes it as thick white discharge associated with an itch. Her VVS microscopy in clinic demonstrates the presence of hyphae and pseudo spores. She is not allergic to any medication and is on the COCP rigvedon for contraception with no missed pills.

What is the first line treatment

A

Fluconazole 150mg stat PO (if pregnancy or BF then clotrimazole pessary 500mg PV)

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16
Q

Lydia comes to clinic worried about whether she has an STI. She has had new vaginal discharge for the past week. She describes it as thick white discharge associated with an itch. Her VVS microscopy in clinic demonstrates the presence of hyphae and pseudo spores. She is not allergic to any medication and is on the COCP rigvedon for contraception with no missed pills.

You treat her with fluconazole 150mg stat, What general advice should you also give?

A

avoid soaps and shower gels, wash with a soap substitute
use emollients and emollient washes e.g.. E45 cream, hydromol etc
wear cotton breathable underwear

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17
Q

Lydia comes back to clinic. She has had multiple episodes of thrush and usually self treats for these buy buying over the counter cannesten duo. Initially this helped her symptoms, but now she feels she doesn’t get any improvement in her symptoms after treatment.

How should you investigate this?

A

consider recurrent thrush
she needs a genital examination to confirm or diagnose the condition and rule out other possible diagnoses
do a VVS for MC&S - ask for candida typing and sesnsitivities
consider investigating for DM, IDA - random BG, or urine to look for glycosuria and FBC to investigate for IDA

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18
Q

Lydia comes back to clinic. She has had multiple episodes of thrush and usually self treats for these buy buying over the counter cannesten duo at least 6 other the past 12 months. She came previously microscopy was positive for VVS. She feels it helps her symptoms but then they are quick to re-occur. She is on the COCP for contraception.

Her VVS demonstrates candida albicans - no resistance to azoles. RBG and FBC were normal.
How would you manage her symptoms?

a) induction - fluconazole 150mg for 3 doses every 72 hours, followed by maintenance 150mg once weekly for 6 months
b) induction - clotrimazole 500mg PV for 7 days, followed by maintenance clotrimazole 500mg PV once weekly for 6 months
c) induction- nystatin 100, 000 units PV for 14 nights, followed by maintenance nystatin pessaries 14 consecutive nights every month for 6 months
d) induction - boric acid 600mg pessaries for 14 consecutive nights, followed by maintenance boric acid 600mg pessaries for 14 nights every month for 6 months

A

answer - a

diagnosis of recurrent thrush as she has had at least 4 episodes in the last 12 months. With 2 confirmed episodes on microscopy and culture.

no resistance to azoles therefore start with treatment line a

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19
Q

Lydia comes back to clinic. She has had multiple episodes of thrush over the past year and usually self treats for these by buying over the counter cannesten duo at least 6 other the past 12 months. She came previously microscopy was positive for VVS. She feels it helps her symptoms but then they are quick to re-occur. She is on the COCP for contraception.

Her VVS demonstrates candida albicans - no resistance to azoles.

She has read that the COCP is linked to causing genital thrush and wants to consider changing her contraception. What would your advice be>

A

explain that there is limited evidence; we don’t know for certain if the COCP does cause increased risk of VVS candidiasis but we do know that other oestrogen products are linked.

It isn’t guaranteed that by changing her contraception her symptoms of thrush will improve.

20
Q

how would you treat a pregnant lady with symptomatic VVS candida?

A

Clotrimazole 500mg PV pessary OD for 7 days

21
Q

how would you treat a pregnant lady with symptomatic recurrent VVS candida?

A

Induction - clotrimazole 500mg PV pessary for 10 to 14 days then maintenance Clotrimazole 500mg PV pessary once weekly for 6 months

22
Q

what is the first line treatment option for non-albican species resistant to azoles?

A

nystatin 100,000 units PV pessaries at night for 14 consecutive nights

23
Q

what are the treatment options for severe VVS?

A

1st line: fluconazole 150mg PO on day 1 or 4

2nd line: clotrimazole 500mg PV pessary day 1 and day 4

24
Q

what is the cure rate achieved by nystatin pessaries?

A

up to 70-90% cure rate

25
Q

what is the remission rate achieved in patients treated with fluconazole for recurrent VVS?

A

82-90%

26
Q

what is the first line (or perhaps gold standard) investigation for VVC recommended by BASHH?

A

microscopy ( if available.. only usually available in level 3 settings)

culture is no longer recommended as a primary lab investigation for acute VVC

27
Q

when is MC&S recommend in management of VVC?

A

in recurrent cases for sensitivities and typing

28
Q

what happens to the vaginal pH when exposed to endogenous or exogenous oestrogen?

A

decreases vaginal pH making it more acidic

29
Q

what is the vaginal pH during the reproductive years

A

vaginal pH is between 3.8-5.0 in reproductive years.
Post-menopausal and pre-pubertal can expect vaginal pH to move to be more alkaline and with the influence of oestrogen this causes vaginal pH to become more acidic

30
Q

why might we see more resistance in practice to azoles despite sensisitivies and typing of candida suggesting no resistance?

A

MIC (minimum inhibitory concentration) of anti-fungal treatments are tested in neutral pH settings, whereas the vaginal pH is usually more of an acidic environment. Azole treatments are less effective in acidic environments and as a consequence can lead to us seeing more resistance or poor response to treatment than expected!

31
Q

describe yeasts interns of their microbiology

A

yeasts are eukaryotic, unicellular micro-organisms and form pseudohyphae and biofilms.

32
Q

what immunodeficiency genetic condition has been found to increase the susceptibility to developing acute and recurrent thrush?

A

MBL (mannose binding lectin) deficiency - specially codon 54 gene polymorphism

33
Q

Emily attends your GUM level 3 services which classical symptoms of acute thrush. You perform microscopy and the nurse tells you that she can see evidence of neutrophils, pseudohyphae and blastospores.

What type of yeast do you think is causing her symptoms and are classical of the microscopy findings?

A) candida glabrata
B) candida albicans
C) candida Krusei

A

B - candida albicans

(presence of neurotrophils, pseudohyphae and blastospores)

33
Q

Emily attends your GUM level 3 services which classical symptoms of acute thrush. You perform microscopy and the nurse tells you that she can see evidence of neutrophils and blastospores.

What type of yeast do you think is causing her symptoms and are classical of the microscopy findings?

A) candida glabrata
B) candida albicans
C) candida Krusei

A

A - candida glabrata (don’t see pseudohyphae)

neutrophils suggest infection

34
Q

if on microscopy you don’t see neutrophils and just presence of spores or hyphae what would this suggest?

A) active infection of candida
B) recurrent infection of candida
C) colonisation of candida

A

c- colonisation of candida

(evidence of no neutrophils suggests an inflammatory response and therefore presence of infection. If absent more likely to represent colonisation)

35
Q

In recurrent thrush what is the gold standard for culture ?

A

direct plating of the HVS onto solid fungal growth medium (sabouraud plate). The benefit of direct plating that it enables some level of quantification of candida in the sample.

If direct plating not avaliable sending a HVS in a transport medium is okay, but quantification is not reliable as samples kept in transport medium for >12 hours allows for continued growth

36
Q

what is the average vaginal pH in cases of acute or recurrent thrush?

A) pH 2.0-3.0
B) pH 3.0-4.0
c) 4.o-4.5
c) 5.0-6.0
d) 6.0-7.0

A

c) 4.0-4.5 (thrush makes it more acidic environment)

37
Q

what should you warn patients using condoms/diaphragms for contraception when using intravaginal and topical treatments for thrush?

A

they can weaken/damage latex condoms and diaphragms

38
Q

what caution do you need to be aware of when prescribing fluconazole?

A

contra-indicated in pregnancy, risk of pregnancy and when BF

also can cause long QT syndrome so be careful if patients on other meds (2 or more) that prolong long QT or known hx of long QT syndrome

39
Q

in severe vulval candidiasis what is more effective

  • oral fluconazole
  • intravaginal pessaries
  • topical treatment
A

oral fluconazole first line
there is NO benefit in topical treatment over oral or pessary treatment (despite most clinicians using it!)

40
Q

what is important to remember about c.krusei strains in terms of treatment options

A

intrinsically resistant to azoles (fluconazole)

41
Q

If a patient is breastfeeding and treated with a stat dose of fluconazole what would your advice be?

A

can continue to BF - very low levels excreeted in breast milk. If having recurrent doses best to express and dump

42
Q

what is the evidence base in terms of treatment for VVC for probiotics, tea tree and essential oils, breathable underwear with antimicrobial protection, yoghurt and honey mixes, diet and oral garlic?

A

insufficient evidence to recommend the use of these alternative treatments. Evidence is limited and of variable quality

43
Q

how should women with HIV be treated if symptomatic with acute or recurrent VVS

A

same as patients who are HIV negative

44
Q

what happens to the risk of VVC on HRT

A

increased

45
Q

what should women suffering from recurrent VVC be counselled regarding contraceptive methods if using COCP, LNG-IUD or CU-IUD

A

extrapolate data to suggest that COCP could potentially increase risk of VVC, however evidence is limited.

some evidence that with Cu-IUD candida can make a biofilm and increase recurrent VVS.

However evidence is limited for all methods in regards to increasing risk and conflicting. patients may wish to explore alternative options

46
Q

what does the evidence say in terms of hormonal link and VVS

A

strong link between hormonal status and candida. Pre-pubertal and post-menopausal women not taking HRT are significantly less prone to developing VVC than women who are not