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Official reprint from UpToDate


www.uptodate.com 2015 UpToDate

Primary coccidioidal infection


Author
John N Galgiani, MD

Section Editor
Carol A Kauffman, MD

Deputy Editor
Anna R Thorner, MD

All topics are updated as new evidence becomes available and our peer review process is complete.
Literature review current through: Jul 2015. | This topic last updated: May 06, 2015.
INTRODUCTION Coccidioidomycosis is the infection caused by the dimorphic fungi of the genus Coccidioides (C.
immitis and C. posadasii) [1]. Most infections are caused by inhalation of spores. The clinical expression of disease
ranges from self-limited acute pneumonia (Valley Fever) to disseminated disease, especially in immunosuppressed
patients. The concentration of cases of coccidioidomycosis in the United States is in the southwestern part of the
country, where the cumulative incidence of patients requiring hospitalization in 2002 was 28.65 per 1 million persons
[2].
The clinical manifestations of uncomplicated primary infection, specific diagnostic tests, and management strategies for
primary infection will be reviewed here. Complicated infections related to coccidioidomycosis are discussed elsewhere.
(See "Management of pulmonary sequelae and complications of coccidioidomycosis" and "Coccidioidal meningitis" and
"Manifestations and treatment of extrapulmonary coccidioidomycosis" and "Coccidioidomycosis in compromised
hosts".)
EPIDEMIOLOGY Coccidioides spp are endemic to certain lower deserts of the western hemisphere, including
southern Arizona, the southern and central valleys of California, southwestern New Mexico, and west Texas in the
United States. They are also found in parts of Mexico and Central and South America. Although these are the most
well-known regions, occasional small pockets of endemicity have been identified in more northern areas of the western
United States. For example, repeated infections have occurred at a specific American Indian archeology site in
Dinosaur National Monument in Utah [3]. Cases of coccidioidomycosis appear to have originated from eastern
Washington state [4] and C. immitis has been detected in the soil in areas that two affected individuals visited [5].
Whole genome sequencing demonstrated genetic identity between an isolate from one of the patients and four soil
isolates obtained from the area of exposure [6].
A substantial increase in the incidence of coccidioidomycosis has been observed in endemic regions of the United
States in recent years. In endemic states in which coccidioidomycosis is reportable to the United States Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah), the incidence of
coccidioidomycosis increased from 5.3 cases per 100,000 population in 1998 to 42.6 cases per 100,000 population in
2011 [7]. Arizona and California account for 66 and 31 percent, respectively, of all nationally reported infections.
Inmates of two California state prisons have been disproportionately affected by coccidioidomycosis compared with
the general population, with 180 cases recognized in 2005 [8].
Several factors have been identified in Arizona, which account for much of the increase. These include a shift to more
sensitive serologic test results to define cases, year-to-year variation in precipitation, and a continued growth of the
population in endemic areas. [7,9].
Risk of infection Estimates of the risk of endemic exposure to Coccidioides spp are approximately 3 percent per
year [10]. In addition, a telephone survey by the Arizona Department of Health Services of patients diagnosed with
Valley Fever in 2007 found that the average time of residence was 16 years [11]. Thus, even persons who have lived in
endemic regions for many years may still be susceptible to a new infection.
The risk of exposure within endemic regions is seasonal, typically being highest in dry periods following a rainy season.
As an example, periods of high incidence in Arizona range from May into July and then between October and early
December [12]. In contrast, the central California valley, which rarely receives significant summer rain, has a single
peak from late spring to late fall. The estimated number of infections per year has risen to approximately 150,000 as a

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result of population increases in southern Arizona and central California [13]. Based upon population sizes within the
most highly endemic regions, it is estimated that approximately 60 percent of all United States coccidioidal infections
occur within Maricopa, Pinal, and Pima counties of Arizona and 30 percent within Kern, Tulare, and San Luis Obispo
counties of California. Cases reported to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show similar
geographic distributions.
MICROBIOLOGY All isolates within the genus Coccidioides were formerly designated C. immitis. However, based
upon DNA sequence analysis, two species have been identified as distinct [14,15]. Isolates from one species are
geographically distributed predominantly in California and have retained the name C. immitis. The other species is
distributed in Arizona, Utah, Texas, and other endemic regions throughout the western hemisphere and is now
designated C. posadasii.
The spectrums of diseases caused by the two species are indistinguishable, and clinical laboratories are not routinely
able to determine species. For this reason, it is simplest to refer to all isolates as Coccidioides species.
Coccidioides spp grow as mold a few inches below the surface of the desert soil. With dry conditions, the mycelia
become very fragile, are easily fractured by even slight air turbulence into single-cell spores (arthroconidia)
approximately 3 to 5 microns in size, and can remain suspended for prolonged periods of time in the air.
PATHOGENESIS Infection is virtually always acquired by inhalation of a single arthroconidium. Within the lung, an
arthroconidium changes from a barrel-shaped cell to a spherical structure and then greatly enlarges, sometimes
becoming 70 microns or more in diameter. Enlarging spherules produce internal septations, and, within each of the
resulting subcompartments, individual cells (endospores) evolve. After several days, mature spherules rupture,
releasing endospores into the infected tissue; each endospore is potentially capable of producing another spherule [1].
Leukocytes collected by bronchoalveolar lavage from patients with acute coccidioidal pneumonia demonstrate that
cellular immunity has been activated, as evidenced by increased interleukin-17, interferon-gamma, and tumor necrosis
factor-alpha levels following in vitro stimulation with coccidioidal antigens [16]. Organisms grown from patient
specimens show a reversion to mycelia on most laboratory media [17,18].
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS After infection, a wide spectrum of manifestations is possible. It is estimated that
less than one-half of all infections comes to medical attention because illness is often subclinical [19,20]. The
proportion of infections that become clinically significant increases with more intensive dust exposure. It is presumed
that this represents higher arthroconidial inoculum exposure, as occurs during archeological excavations or desert
military maneuvers [21,22].
When illness is clinically significant, a subacute process known as Valley Fever with respiratory and systemic
complaints is typical, often lasting for weeks to months. In the great majority of such infections, resolution occurs
without specific antifungal therapy. Future respiratory exposure to arthroconidia rarely, if ever, results in clinical illness.
Primary infections due to Coccidioides species most frequently manifest as community-acquired pneumonia (CAP)
approximately 7 to 21 days after exposure. In a study from Pima County, Arizona, 29 percent of patients diagnosed
with CAP were serologically positive for coccidioidal infection [23]. The most common presenting symptoms are chest
pain, cough, and fever (table 1) [24-31]. Hemoptysis may occur and suggests the development of a pulmonary cavity.
Fatigue can persist for months, and the frequent complaint of arthralgias has contributed to the alternate name of
"desert rheumatism" for this illness. Cutaneous manifestations of primary coccidioidal infection include erythema
nodosum and erythema multiforme. Erythema nodosum is much more common in women than in men and often is the
symptom prompting evaluation for Valley Fever. (See "Erythema nodosum".)
Most routine laboratory findings are unremarkable [32]. A common but nonspecific abnormality is the erythrocyte
sedimentation rate, which often is one- or twofold above the upper limits of normal. The peripheral blood leukocyte
count is usually normal or only slightly elevated. However, eosinophilia (>5 percent) was found in approximately
one-quarter of patients [1]. In occasional patients, eosinophilia can be striking.
Although initial infections usually have a respiratory component, standard posteroanterior and lateral chest radiographs

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may be unremarkable in up to one-half of all patients. Common radiographic abnormalities include unilateral infiltrate
and ipsilateral hilar adenopathy (image 1). Less frequent is evidence of a parapneumonic effusion [33]. Peripheral
thin-walled pulmonary cavities or nodules are detected in 4 to 8 percent of all patients (image 2) [34]. Rare cases of
empyema have been reported [35].
FREQUENT ABSENCE OF EARLY DIAGNOSIS Given how nonspecific the symptoms, signs, and routine
laboratory findings of primary coccidioidal infection are, many, if not most, infections are not identified because
clinicians do not consider the diagnosis. As an example, a cluster of 21 cases of a flu-like illness with rash in the
majority of patients was noted in a church group returning to Washington State after building an orphanage in Mexico
[36]. Sixteen patients were symptomatic and sought medical attention, but the diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis was
only confirmed in one case.
Although this cluster was located outside of the southwest in an area in which Valley Fever is not common, low rates of
disease recognition have also occurred in endemic areas. In Arizona, the number of cases of coccidioidomycosis
reported to the Department of Public Health from 1999 to 2001 averaged 1900 per year [12]. This number is less than
10 percent of the expected number of illnesses, as estimated by several methods [37]. In a study from two medical
centers in metropolitan Phoenix, Arizona, the number of patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) tested for
Valley Fever was only 2 and 13 percent, respectively [38]. In one study, the clinician's workload, as measured by
number of clinic visits, was directly proportional to both the number of cases of CAP diagnosed and the number of
cases of coccidioidomycosis diagnosed (figure 1) [37].
A prospective observational study found that 16 of 55 cases (29 percent) of CAP in Tucson, Arizona, were caused by
Coccidioides spp [23]. In another study, 6 of 35 patients (17 percent) with CAP in Phoenix, Arizona, had evidence of
acute coccidioidomycosis [39]. A similarly high proportion may be evident in persons who develop CAP within the oneto three-week incubation period after visiting an endemic area.
Some practitioners consider the failure to diagnose early coccidioidal infections as an insignificant problem, since many
infections resolve without specific therapy. However, identifying coccidioidal infections as early as possible has many
benefits, including [40]:
Allaying patient anxiety by arriving at a specific diagnosis, often simultaneously dispelling the fear of cancer
Reducing the need for additional diagnostic testing, some of which involve invasive or costly procedures
Eliminating empiric or protracted use of antibacterial treatments
Reducing the morbidity of less frequent but progressively destructive extrapulmonary complications, most of
which develop within the first several months following the initial infection
For these reasons, the standard of care for management of this disease could be improved by a greater attention to
early diagnosis. This approach is emphasized in the 2005 Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) guidelines for
the treatment of coccidioidomycosis [13] and the 2007 IDSA guidelines for the treatment of community-acquired
pneumonia [41].
METHODS OF DIAGNOSIS Considering the diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis is an essential first step for detecting
most coccidioidal infections in patients with endemic exposure, however brief. A respiratory illness of more than a
week's duration, especially if it appears to involve the lower respiratory tract (ie, community-acquired pneumonia),
should be considered suspicious for coccidioidomycosis. Other suspicious syndromes paired with endemic exposure
are new onset of diffuse, symmetrical arthralgias and the rash of either erythema nodosum or erythema multiforme.
Because exposure usually occurs within an endemic region, it is critical to obtain an accurate travel history. Even brief
exposures, such as changing planes in Phoenix, Arizona, have been sufficient to cause infection [3,36,42-44]. In most
cases, the incubation period for onset of symptoms is 7 to 21 days. However, for patients who are
immunocompromised due to AIDS, solid organ transplantation, or lymphoma, reactivation can occur after much longer
time periods [45,46].

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Culture Isolation of Coccidioides species in culture definitively establishes the diagnosis, even in patients with
relatively mild pneumonia. Although fungal cultures are usually requested only in hospitalized patients or in those with
more extensive disease, there is value to early diagnosis as noted above. Direct examination of the smear with
potassium hydroxide (KOH) preparation or calcofluor white staining is also helpful.
There are two disadvantages to culture. First, growth may take several days to weeks with subsequent delays in
diagnosis. Furthermore, the propagation of Coccidioides spp in the clinical laboratory represents a significant health
risk, since secondary cases have been reported in workers opening the plates for inspection [47,48]. Thus, laboratory
personnel should be notified when a sample with suspected Coccidioides is being sent for processing. In contrast,
specimens for culture can be safely collected by healthcare workers since coccidioidal infection is not transmitted
person to person. Coccidioides spp are listed by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
as a select agent. Special rules govern its handling and storage. (See the National Select Agent Registry website for
further information concerning the handling of select agents.)
Serologic tests Serologic testing is helpful for making the diagnosis and for monitoring patients on therapy. (See
'Patient monitoring' below.)
In patients with primary infections managed as outpatients, diagnosis usually relies upon serologic testing. Commercial
products are available to perform screening coccidioidal serologies in any general clinical laboratory. Alternatively,
reference laboratories can carry out more detailed testing. The details of the laboratory diagnosis of
coccidioidomycosis are discussed separately. (See "Laboratory diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis".)
However, regardless of the method chosen for detecting coccidioidal antibodies, three general principles guide
interpretation:
Any positive serologic result is very likely to be clinically relevant. Most patients lose serologic reactivity within
months of an infection unless residual lesions are evident or infection is active.
A negative serologic result lowers the likelihood but does not exclude the diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis.
Although most tests for coccidioidal antibodies are very specific, they are relatively insensitive, especially during
the first one to two weeks after infection [1].
Repeating tests, if a first serologic test is negative, will improve diagnostic sensitivity [49].
Histopathology The diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis is occasionally made by identification of spherules in tissue
specimens. Staining with hematoxylin and eosin, periodic acid-Schiff, or methenamine silver stain will all demonstrate
the organism, although silver stain is considered the most sensitive (picture 1A-C) [1].
Polymerase chain reaction A real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay was developed and tested in 266
respiratory specimens and demonstrated 100 percent sensitivity and 98 percent specificity for Coccidioides spp
compared with culture [50]. Sensitivity in paraffin-embedded tissue samples was found to be lower (73 percent). If
these preliminary results are validated with larger sample numbers, real-time PCR may offer a rapid and safe means
of detecting Coccidioides directly from patient specimens, including fixed tissue.
Skin testing Most patients who become infected with Coccidioides spp develop dermal hypersensitivity to
coccidioidal antigens as manifested by induration to skin testing [51]. In 2014, a commercial skin testing preparation
was reintroduced for clinical use [52-54]. Despite this, we do not recommend using the Coccidioides immitis spherulederived skin test antigen to diagnose current illness because dermal hypersensitivity remains present for life and a
reactive skin test may therefore reflect past infection unrelated to the current illness. Another problem is that
occasional patients with the more extensive complications of coccidioidomycosis may be anergic; in these cases, a
negative skin test could conceivably delay the correct diagnosis. Skin testing is more useful for epidemiologic studies,
since dermal reactivity remains present for life. Skin testing patients in endemic areas is also useful as part of the
routine assessment of individuals when they are not ill to determine baseline skin test status in order to guide future
management if they do become ill. (See "Laboratory diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis", section on 'Skin testing'.)
RISK FACTORS FOR COMPLICATIONS AND DISEASE SEVERITY After diagnosis, the presence of complications

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should be assessed with a careful history and physical examination. Risk factors for complications include:
HIV or AIDS
Immunosuppressive medications used in transplants patients
Glucocorticoids (20 mg or more per day of prednisone or its equivalent)
Lymphoma
Antitumor necrosis factor therapy
Chemotherapy for solid tumors
Diabetes mellitus
Pregnancy
Preexisting cardiopulmonary conditions
The most significant of these risk factors is major suppression of cellular immunity, as occurs with HIV infection [55,56],
solid organ transplantation [57-59], and high-dose glucocorticoid administration [60]. Coccidioidomycosis first
developing during pregnancy (especially during the third trimester) is a significant risk factor for severe, disseminated
disease [61,62]. Diabetes mellitus has been associated with more slowly resolving pulmonary infection and residual
pulmonary cavitation [63]. Individuals of African or Philippine descent also have an increased risk of extrapulmonary
complications [31,64,65]. Although there appears to be more serious disease with increasing age [66], a comparison
of patients younger than 60 years of age versus those 60 years of age did not detect significant differences [67].
(See "Coccidioidomycosis in compromised hosts" and "Coccidioidal meningitis".)
To detect extrapulmonary infection, careful review of symptoms and physical examination is usually adequate.
Extrapulmonary infection can be found at any site, but skin, bones and joints, and central nervous system localization
are the most common (image 3) [68-70]. Active coccidioidal lesions typically produce regional symptoms. These
include local discomfort, swelling, and/or ulceration. Any focal abnormality of this sort that has developed since the
onset of the primary infection should be a source of concern. These physical exam findings should prompt further
imaging or sampling for histology and culture.
MANAGEMENT
Uncomplicated infections Otherwise healthy patients without evidence of extensive coccidioidal infection or risk
factors for more serious infection usually do not need antifungal therapy. However, it is important that such patients be
followed for a year or longer to monitor for the development of complications. Therapy can be considered for certain
patients on an individual basis. (See 'Whom to treat' below.)
Whom to treat Patients with severe illness as well as those at greatly increased risk of dissemination due to
immunosuppression or pregnancy should be treated. In contrast, the value of antifungal therapy for patients with
uncomplicated early coccidioidal infection is not known because prospective randomized trials have not been
performed. While it is clear from older studies that most patients resolve their infection without therapy, it is possible
that some patients might benefit from treatment, either by shortening the course of illness or by preventing
complications.
The possible role of treatment was evaluated in an observational study of 105 patients who had primary pulmonary
coccidioidomycosis and who were seen at a university-affiliated Veterans Administration clinic [71]. Based upon
severity of illness as assessed by the attending staff, 54 patients were treated and 51 were not. Treatment was more
likely to be initiated in patients with elevated symptom scores. There was no difference between the groups with
respect to overall rates of improvement. Among the untreated patients, none were subsequently found to have
complications.
However, among 38 of the treated patients, eight had relapse or progression of their coccidioidal infection following
discontinuation of therapy; the duration of treatment among these patients ranged from 1 to 24 months. A possible
reason for these findings is that patients with more severe illness are more likely to develop relapse. These findings
provide no support for treating patients with mild symptoms of primary coccidioidomycosis but emphasize the

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importance of close and prolonged follow-up for patients with severe illness requiring treatment. (See 'Patient
monitoring' below.)
Given the absence of definitive data, it is a matter of judgment as to whether an individual patient might benefit from
therapy with available oral antifungals, most frequently itraconazole or fluconazole. As noted above, patients with
severe illness should be treated. However, opinion varies about the most relevant factors to judge the severity of
illness. Commonly used indicators include:
Greater than 10 percent loss of body weight
Night sweats persisting greater than three weeks
Infiltrates involving more than half of one lung or portions of both lungs
Prominent or persistent hilar adenopathy
Anti-coccidioidal complement fixing antibody concentrations in excess of 1:16
Inability to work
Persisting symptoms for more than two months
In addition to patients with severe illness, treatment should also be given to those at increased risk of dissemination
due to immunosuppression or pregnancy [13]. (See 'Risk factors for complications and disease severity' above.)
Treatment regimens If a decision to begin treatment is made, reasonable doses are 400 mg/day for ketoconazole,
400 mg/day for fluconazole, and 200 mg twice daily for itraconazole [13]. Of the commercially available azoles, only
ketoconazole has been approved for the treatment of coccidioidomycosis by the US Food and Drug Administration
(FDA). However, the Mycoses Study Group has published descriptions of large prospective clinical trials using either
fluconazole or itraconazole as treatment of coccidioidomycosis.
Fluconazole has fewer drug interactions, whereas itraconazole has less of a drying effect on skin and mucous
membranes. Both fluconazole and itraconazole have a lower incidence of gastrointestinal side effects compared with
ketoconazole. Ketoconazole has also been associated with decreased testosterone synthesis and gynecomastia. (See
"Pharmacology of azoles".)
There is little information available about the value of newer azoles, such as voriconazole or posaconazole, for treating
primary coccidioidal pneumonia.
An amphotericin B preparation should be considered only in the most severe cases of coccidioidal pneumonia due to
its toxicity and problems with administration.
Duration If treatment is instituted, the duration of azole therapy for uncomplicated primary coccidioidal infection
generally ranges from three to six months [13]. However, there is no consensus regarding which factors should guide
decisions about duration of therapy.
PATIENT MONITORING Regardless of whether treatment is instituted, immediately following diagnosis, patients
are seen in follow-up every two to four weeks. During the weeks to months following presentation, respiratory
symptoms (eg, cough and pleurisy) and systemic signs (eg, weight loss, night sweats, and fever) typically markedly
diminish or resolve. Once such improvement has occurred, intervals between clinic visits are usually extended to every
three to six months for up to two years (especially in those who are treated with antifungals [71]) to document
radiographic resolution and identify any evidence of pulmonary or extrapulmonary complications [13].
Fatigue and lethargy associated with coccidioidal pneumonia may persist for many weeks or months, far beyond the
resolution of all other symptoms and laboratory abnormalities. The protracted duration of these symptoms resulting
from the disease itself is compounded by the resulting deconditioning from reduced physical activity. Developing a
structured physical rehabilitation program and referral to a physical therapist for reconditioning training is often helpful.
Serial serologic testing for complement fixingtype anti-coccidioidal antibodies should be repeated at least once
several weeks after the initial diagnosis, since a rise in antibody concentrations may be associated with progressive
disease [72]. Although the original descriptions of this test noted that titers greater than 1:16 were often found in

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patients with disseminated infection, this correlation is now less reliable due to differences in commercial assays.
Serologic studies may also be compromised in patients with altered immunity (transplant patients or HIV-infected
patients) [1].
In patients who have a positive Coccidioides antigen test, which sometimes occurs in those with extensive disease, we
typically repeat this test every one to two months until it becomes negative. We use it to confirm that the burden of
disease is being reduced by treatment. It should not be used to determine timing of discontinuation of therapy since
patients require continued therapy even after this test has become negative.
Radiographic abnormalities should be rechecked to determine if they resolve or leave a residual nodule or cavity.
Determining whether pulmonary lesions evolve into residual nodules is also useful because it obviates the need to
investigate the etiology of this radiographic finding in the future. (See "Management of pulmonary sequelae and
complications of coccidioidomycosis".)
An evaluation for disseminated disease should begin if a patient develops any suspicious skin lesions, severe or
persistent headaches, or new joint effusions. (See 'Risk factors for complications and disease severity' above.)
INFORMATION FOR PATIENTS UpToDate offers two types of patient education materials, The Basics and
Beyond the Basics. The Basics patient education pieces are written in plain language, at the 5th to 6th grade reading
level, and they answer the four or five key questions a patient might have about a given condition. These articles are
best for patients who want a general overview and who prefer short, easy-to-read materials. Beyond the Basics
patient education pieces are longer, more sophisticated, and more detailed. These articles are written at the 10th to
12th grade reading level and are best for patients who want in-depth information and are comfortable with some
medical jargon.
Here are the patient education articles that are relevant to this topic. We encourage you to print or e-mail these topics
to your patients. (You can also locate patient education articles on a variety of subjects by searching on patient info
and the keyword(s) of interest.)
Basics topic (see "Patient information: Valley Fever (coccidioidomycosis) (The Basics)")
SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Epidemiology
Coccidioidomycosis is the infection caused by the dimorphic fungi of the genus Coccidioides (C. immitis and C.
posadasii). Most infections are caused by inhalation of spores. The clinical expression of disease ranges from
self-limited acute pneumonia (Valley Fever) to disseminated disease, especially in immunosuppressed patients.
(See 'Introduction' above.)
Coccidioides spp are endemic to certain lower deserts of the western hemisphere including southern Arizona, the
southern and central valleys of California, southwestern New Mexico, and west Texas in the United States. They
are also found in parts of Mexico and Central and South America. (See 'Epidemiology' above.)
Clinical manifestations
After infection, a wide spectrum of manifestations is possible. It is estimated that less than one-half of all
infections come to medical attention because illness is often subclinical. (See 'Clinical manifestations' above.)
When illness is clinically significant, a subacute process known as Valley Fever with respiratory and systemic
complaints is typical, often lasting for weeks to months. In the great majority of such infections, resolution occurs
without specific antifungal therapy. (See 'Clinical manifestations' above.)
Primary infections due to Coccidioides species most frequently manifest as community-acquired pneumonia
approximately 7 to 21 days after exposure. (See 'Clinical manifestations' above.)
Given how nonspecific the symptoms, signs, and routine laboratory findings of primary coccidioidal infection are,

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many, if not most, infections are not identified because clinicians do not consider the diagnosis. (See 'Frequent
absence of early diagnosis' above.)
Diagnosis
Considering the diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis is an essential first step for detecting most coccidioidal
infections. Because exposure nearly always occurs within an endemic region, it is critical to obtain an accurate
travel history. (See 'Methods of diagnosis' above.)
Isolation of Coccidioides species in culture definitively establishes the diagnosis, even in patients with relatively
mild pneumonia. Direct examination of the smear with potassium hydroxide (KOH) preparation or calcofluor white
staining is also helpful. (See 'Culture' above.)
In patients with primary infections managed as outpatients, diagnosis usually relies upon serologic testing.
Commercial products are available to perform screening coccidioidal serologies in any general clinical laboratory.
Alternatively, reference laboratories can carry out more detailed testing. (See 'Serologic tests' above and
"Laboratory diagnosis of coccidioidomycosis".)
Management
After diagnosis, the presence of complications should be assessed with a careful history and physical
examination. The most significant risk factor is major suppression of cellular immunity, as occurs in with HIV
infection, solid organ transplantation, and high-dose glucocorticoid administration. (See 'Risk factors for
complications and disease severity' above.)
Otherwise healthy patients without evidence of extensive coccidioidal infection or risk factors for more serious
infection usually do not need antifungal therapy. However, it is important that such patients be followed for a year
or longer to monitor for the development of complications. (See 'Uncomplicated infections' above.)
Patients with severe illness as well as those at greatly increased risk of dissemination due to immunosuppression
or pregnancy should be treated. These would be considered complicated situations. (See 'Whom to treat'
above.)
If a decision to begin treatment is made, reasonable doses are 400 mg/day for ketoconazole, 400 mg/day for
fluconazole, and 200 mg twice daily for itraconazole. Fluconazole has fewer drug interactions, whereas
itraconazole has less of a drying effect on skin and mucous membranes. Both fluconazole and itraconazole have
a lower incidence of gastrointestinal and other side effects compared with ketoconazole. (See 'Treatment
regimens' above.)
The duration of azole therapy for uncomplicated primary coccidioidal infection generally ranges from three to six
months. (See 'Duration' above.)
Use of UpToDate is subject to the Subscription and License Agreement.
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GRAPHICS
Initial symptoms and signs of coccidioidal pneumonia
Complaint

Median percentage (range)

Constitutional
Fever

61 (30 to 99)

Fatigue

59 (32 to 83)

Pulmonary
Chest pain

73 (52 to 95)

Cough

64 (44 to 89)

Dyspnea

21 (12 to 63)

Hemoptysis

5 (3 to 21)

Other
Headache

27 (17 to 74)

Sore throat

24 (14 to 41)

Arthralgia

23 (8 to 52)

Erythema nodosum

9 (3 to 23)

Graphic 69260 Version 3.0

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Pulmonary coccidioidomycosis

(A) Chest radiograph shows consolidation in right lower lung zone


(arrow) and right hilar enlargement (arrowhead).
(B) Mediastinal window of contrast-enhanced computed tomography
(CT) (5 mm collimation) scan obtained at the level of bronchus
intermedius shows enlarged right hilar (arrowhead), subcarinal, and
paraesophageal lymph nodes (arrows).
(C) CT scan obtained at the level of the right middle lobe bronchus
shows parenchymal consolidation in the right middle lobe and enlarged
subcarinal lymph nodes (arrows).
(D) Photomicrograph of the surgical biopsy specimen shows
granulomatous inflammation and fibrosis with infiltration of
multinucleated giant cells, eosinophils, and lymphocytes (hematoxylin
and eosin stain, x100).
(E) Photomicrograph shows a yeast form developing a spherule of
Coccidioides immitis (arrow), which is engulfed by a multinucleated
giant cell (arrowheads). The periodic acid-Schiff stain highlights its thick
yeast wall (periodic acid-Schiff stain, x400). The patient was a

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58-year-old man with a one-month history of dyspnea and fever.


Reproduced with permission from: Fungal and parasitic infections. In:
Imaging of pulmonary infections. Muller NL, Franquet T, Kyung SL (Eds),
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia 2007. Copyright 2007 Lippincott
Williams & Wilkins. www.lww.com.
Graphic 76967 Version 13.0

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Chest computed tomograph of a patient with


coccidioidomycosis

High-resolution computed tomography (CT) image (1.5-mm collimation)


shows thin-walled cavity in right upper lobe. The diagnosis of
coccidioidomycosis was made at surgical resection. The patient was a
44-year-old man who developed coccidioidomycosis following travel to
an endemic area.
Reproduced with permission from: Fungal and parasitic infections. In:
Imaging of pulmonary infections. Muller NL, Franquet T, Kyung SL (Eds),
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia 2007. Copyright 2007 Lippincott
Williams & Wilkins. www.lww.com.
Graphic 51795 Version 7.0

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Physician-specific diagnosis of Valley Fever in


relation to workload and diagnosis of communityacquired pneumonia (CAP)

Size of yellow circles is proportional to diagnoses of Valley Fever (1 to 10


patients). Red circles indicate physicians who have not diagnosed Valley
Fever. The black arrow points to a physician who had not diagnosed this
infection despite making the diagnosis of CAP 98 times.
Reproduced with permission from: Campion JM, Gardner M, Galgiani JN.
Coccidiodomycosis (Valley Fever) in older adults: An increasing problem. Arizona
Geriatrics Society Journal 2003; 8:3. Copyright Arizona Geriatrics Society.
Graphic 65388 Version 3.0

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Coccidioides spp in lung tissue

Spherules of Coccidioides spp in a transbronchial biopsy specimen


stained with hematoxylin and eosin.
Courtesy of Jeffrey Houck, MD.
Graphic 75250 Version 3.0

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Coccidioides spp in lung tissue

Methenamine silver stain of a pleural biopsy specimen, showing small


spherules (white arrow), clumps of endospores (blue arrow), and hyphal
forms (black arrows; original magnification, x400).
Reproduced with permission from: Nicolasora N, Cinti SK, Riddell IV J,
Kauffman CA. Photo quiz. A 53-year-old man with a large air bubble in his
chest. Clin Infect Dis 2008; 47:823. Copyright 2008 University of Chicago
Press.
Graphic 55301 Version 3.0

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Coccidioides spp in lung tissue

Spherules of Coccidioides spp in a transbronchial biopsy specimen


stained with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS).
Courtesy of Jeffrey Houck, MD.
Graphic 68068 Version 3.0

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MRI of patient with disseminated


coccidioidomycosis

42-year-old woman with paranoid schizophrenia who presented with


weight loss, fever, and malaise. Patient had previously been evaluated at
another hospital for multiple vertebral lesions and right breast mass that
was eroding through right anterior chest wall.
(A) Sagittal T2-weighted magnetic resonance image (MRI) of cervical
spine shows large paraspinal fluid collection (arrowheads) with
contiguous vertebral body involvement from C5 to T3 with relative
sparing of intervertebral disks.
(B) Sagittal T2-weighted MRI of thoracic spine shows T7 to T8 discitis
and osteomyelitis with anterior epidural extension (arrow) and resultant
spinal cord compression and edema (arrowhead).
From: Wilde GE, Emery C, Lally JF. Radiological reasoning: Miliary disease,
vertebral osteomyelitis, and soft-tissue abscess. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2008;
190:S11-7. Reprinted with permission from the American Journal of
Roentgenology.

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Graphic 75408 Version 15.0

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Disclosures
Disclosures: John N Galgiani, MD Grant/Research/Clinical Trial Support: Viamet [anti-fungal drugs (VT-1161)]. Consultant/Advisory Boards:
Viamet [anti-fungal drugs (various, pre-clinical)]; Nielsen Biosciences [Coccidioidomycosis (spherusol)]. Employment: Valley Fever Solutions
(nikkomycin z). Equity Ownership/Stock Options: Valley Fever Solutions (nikkomycin z). Carol A Kauffman, MD Nothing to disclose. Anna R
Thorner, MD Nothing to disclose.
Contributor disclosures are reviewed for conflicts of interest by the editorial group. When found, these are addressed by vetting through a
multi-level review process, and through requirements for references to be provided to support the content. Appropriately referenced content is
required of all authors and must conform to UpToDate standards of evidence.
Conflict of interest policy

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