RESUMEN
A prospective study to assess the efficacy of fluconazole in oropharyngeal candidiasis in patients with HIV was conducted. A cohort of 30 HIV-positive persons with clinical and microbiologic confirmed oropharyngeal candidiasis (Candida albicans > 1000 CFU/ml) received fluconazole 100 mg daily for 7 days. In vitro antifungal susceptibility tests demonstrated a lack of fluconazole resistances. Cultures of mouth swabs were performed at the end of therapy and 2 weeks later. There was a clinical and microbiologic cure in 26 patients (87%). In 10 of these 26, cultures remained negative after 2 weeks; most of them had CD4 lymphocyte count > 400/ml. In the other 16 patients (53%), cultures showed a microbiologic relapse 2 weeks after treatment. In spite of clinical improvement, treatment failure was observed in four patients, all of them with CD4 lymphocyte count < 50 ml.