Episode 214: Valley Fever Complications Jordan Redden (medical student) engages in a conversation about coccidioidomycosis with Dr. Schlaerth and Dr. Arreaza. Common complications of Valley Fever are described, both pulmonary and extrapulmonary. Dr. Kooner adds insights into cavitary lesions of lungs.
Dr. Arreaza: Welcome back to the podcast. I’m Dr. Arreaza, and today we’re talking about a topic that’s very relevant here in the Central Valley but often not well known in the rest of the country, it is called ValleyFever, or coccidioidomycosis. For more info about the Valley Fever diagnosis and initial treatment, please go to our previous podcast on the subject! Episode 143, recorded by wonderful Dr. Lovedip Kooner. To help us walk through this, I’m joined by Jordan, a medical student. Jordan, welcome back and Dr. Schlaerth, please introduce yourself.
Jordan: Thanks, Dr. Arreaza. This is such an important topic, especially in endemic areas like where we live, the Central Valley of California, and Arizona. The public may think of Valley Fever as a mild pneumonia that just goes away eventually. But that’s not always the case. Some patients develop serious, life-altering complications, and a small but important number develop disseminated disease.
Dr. Arreaza: Exactly. So today, we’re going to break this down systematically: pulmonary complications, dissemination to other organs, CNS disease, musculoskeletal involvement, systemic symptoms, and then we’ll touch on treatment principles and why follow-up matters so much.
Dr. Schlaerth: Valley Fever can be missed in areas where it is not as common as in the Valley. 1989, earthquake in LA.Pneumonias that is not responding to treatment can be pulmonary cocci.
Dr. Arreaza: Before we dive into specific complications, let’s zoom out. What percentage of patients get a complicated disease?
Jordan: So, most infections are self-limited, but about 5–10% of patients develop chronic or progressive pulmonary disease, and 1% develop extrapulmonary disseminated disease. That sounds small, but given how common Valley Fever is in endemic areas, that’s still a lot of people.
Dr. Arreaza: And the complications can be devastating, and they are not always in primary infection.
Dr. Schlaerth: Dissemination can be silent. We don’t know exactly why dissemination happens; some ethnicities are more susceptible or other groups.
Dr. Arreaza: Let’s start where Valley Fever usually begins: the lungs. What are the major pulmonary complications clinicians should know about?
Jordan: The most common long-term complications are chronic pulmonary sequelae. These include: cavitary disease, pulmonary nodules, bronchiectasis, pulmonary fibrosis, and pleural complications like effusions, empyema, or pneumothorax.
Dr. Arreaza: Cavitary disease comes up a lot. What does that look like clinically?
Jordan: Cavities form in about 5–15% of cases. Many are asymptomatic, but symptomatic cavities can cause fever, fatigue, cough, sputum production, dyspnea, and hemoptysis. The tricky part is that symptoms often wax and wane, and even with treatment, current antifungals don’t eradicate the organism from chronic cavities.
Dr. Arreaza: That’s very unfortunate, and sometimes those cavities remain and patients might not know that they have them, and those cavitary lesions may rupture.
Jordan: Yes, rupture can lead to pyopneumothorax, which is a surgical emergency requiring prompt intervention.
Dr. Kooner: Hello everyone, this is Dr. Kooner, and today I want to talk about one of my favorite topics: coccidioidal cavitary disease—because nothing says “fun lung pathology” like a hole in the lung that refuses to leave.
Coccidioidal cavitary disease is a chronic pulmonary manifestation of infection. Many times, it’s found incidentally on imaging. Sometimes patients are being evaluated for respiratory symptoms, sometimes for systemic complaints, and sometimes for something completely unrelated—like when a chest X-ray was ordered for a pre-op clearance and suddenly… surprise cavity.
Pulmonary cavities develop in about 5-10% of patients with Valley Fever. Most of the time, they appear as thin-walled residual lesions. They can be solitary or multiple, and they can range from a few centimeters to much larger. And while textbooks love to show the “classic look,” in real life they can be a little more… creative.
These cavities can persist for years. Some patients feel completely fine and never know they have one. Others develop chronic symptoms or complications like rupture into the pleural space, secondary infection, or bleeding, which is when everyone suddenly becomes very interested in that cavity.
Here’s an important teaching point: about 20% of patients with cavitary disease also have disseminated infection, most commonly involving bone. This challenges the old-school teaching that cavitary lung disease and dissemination rarely happen together.
One major risk factor for cavitary disease—and for more severe or complicated infection overall—is diabetes mellitus.
So how do patients usually present?
Symptoms often overlap with classic Valley Fever symptoms. The most common presenting symptoms for cavitary disease that usually trigger evaluation are cough, hemoptysis, fever, and shortness of breath.
Diagnosis and monitoring rely heavily on chest imaging. Plain chest X-rays are usually enough for stable disease. CT scans are typically saved for when you’re worried about complications. Serologic testing is also key, especially complement fixation titers. In general, higher titers correlate with more severe disease and higher relapse risk.
Management depends on symptoms and host factors.
If the patient is asymptomatic and immunocompetent, they often don’t need antifungal therapy. These patients can usually be followed with periodic clinical and imaging monitoring watch closely and don’t panic.
Symptomatic patients are typically treated with oral triazoles, most commonly fluconazole or itraconazole. Treatment is long—usually at least 6 to 12 months, and often longer—because symptoms love to come back once therapy stops. These medications are usually suppressive rather than curative, although newer data suggests triazoles may help with cavity closure in some patients.
Relapses happen in about 25 to 33% of immunocompetent patients, and even more often in immunocompromised patients or transplant recipients. Many of these patients end up needing long-term or even indefinite therapy. Not ideal—but still better than uncontrolled disease.
Surgery still has a role, but it’s more selective now. It’s usually reserved for complications like life-threatening hemoptysis or rupture into the pleural space. Early ruptures might be managed with chest tube drainage. More complicated or delayed cases may need decortication or lung resection.
So, the big picture: symptomatic coccidioidal cavitary disease can be a chronic management challenge. It requires individualized treatment decisions, prolonged therapy for many patients, and long-term follow-up with imaging and serologic monitoring to catch relapses early and prevent complications.
And if there’s one takeaway, it’s this: if you find a stable cavity in someone known to have Valley Fever, sometimes the best move is careful monitoring—not chasing it with endless tests that make everyone nervous, including the patient.
Thanks for listening—and remember, sometimes the lung keeps souvenirs from infections… and sometimes those souvenirs stick around for years. Now, let’s continue with the discussion about pulmonary nodules. This is Dr. Kooner, signing off.