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Introduction. Fungal infections have shown an increase in recent decades. Continued advancement of
medical science offers life-saving treatment options for a variety of hematologic, oncologic, and
rheumatologic conditions. Immunosuppression, a common therapeutic side-effect, predisposes patients to
invasive fungal infections, which are escalating in prevalence. The development of effective, well tolerated
antifungals has lagged behind the advances of antibacterial therapy. An antifungal agent is a drug that
selectively eliminates fungal pathogens from a host with minimal toxicity to the host. Bacteria are
prokaryotic and hence offer numerous structural and metabolic targets that differ from those of the human
host. Fungi, in contrast, are eukaryotes, and consequently most agents toxic to fungi are also toxic to the
host. Furthermore, because fungi generally grow slowly and often in multicellular forms, they are more
difficult to quantify than bacteria.
Aim of study. The research is aimed to analyze bibliographic data of antifungal drugs used as remedies for
chronical and/or systemic fungal infections, their toxicity and fungal drug resistance.
Methods and materials. Theoretic systemic research, dates and information analysis based on international
facts: PubMed, Medline, Environmental Issues & Policy Index, Google Academic etc.
Results. Drugs for systemic antifungal treatment include the following: Amphotericin B (and its lipid
formulations); Various azole derivatives (fluconazole isavuconazole, itraconazole, posaconazole, and
voriconazole); Echinocandins (anidulafungin, caspofungin, and micafungin); Flucytosine. Amphotericin B,
an effective but relatively toxic drug, has long been the mainstay of antifungal therapy for invasive and
serious mycoses. However, newer potent and less toxic triazoles and echinocandins are now often
recommended as first-line drugs for many invasive fungal infections. These drugs have markedly changed
the approach to antifungal therapy, sometimes even allowing oral treatment of chronic mycoses.
Conclusion. With the advent of the polyenes, azoles, and fluorocytosine, previously fatal infections can be
treated now. However, as modern medicine continues to extend life through aggressive therapy of other
life-threatening diseases such as cancer, there is an increasing population at risk for opportunistic fungal
infections. Such patients represent a special challenge because they often are left with little host immune
function. Therefore, chemotherapeutic agents should be fungicidal and not just fungistatic. The search
continues for fungicidal agents that are nontoxic to the host. |
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