Updated: January 22, 2026
How to Find a Doctor Who Can Prescribe Micafungin Near You [2026 Guide]
Author
Peter Daggett

Summarize with AI
- Who Prescribes Micafungin?
- Infectious Disease Specialists
- Transplant Physicians and Hematologists/Oncologists
- Hospitalists and Intensivists (ICU Physicians)
- Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants
- Can Micafungin Be Prescribed via Telehealth?
- How to Get Referred to an Infectious Disease Specialist
- What to Tell Your Doctor
- What Happens After You Start Micafungin?
Micafungin is prescribed by infectious disease specialists and other hospital-based physicians. Here's how to find the right doctor who can prescribe it in 2026.
Micafungin (Mycamine) is not a medication you walk into a clinic to request. It is an IV antifungal used for serious, often life-threatening fungal infections, and it is prescribed by specialists who manage complex infectious diseases. If you or a family member needs micafungin, this guide explains which doctors prescribe it and how to get connected to the right care quickly.
Who Prescribes Micafungin?
Micafungin is not a controlled substance, but its use is largely confined to hospital and specialty clinical settings. The following physician specialties and healthcare providers most commonly prescribe it:
Infectious Disease Specialists
Infectious disease (ID) physicians are the specialists most commonly associated with micafungin prescribing. They are called in as consultants for patients with blood stream infections, invasive fungal infections, and complex antibiotic or antifungal management. An ID consultation is typically the first step for any patient with confirmed or suspected candidemia. You can find an ID specialist by asking your primary care physician for a referral or searching through the Infectious Diseases Society of America's (IDSA) physician finder.
Transplant Physicians and Hematologists/Oncologists
For patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), micafungin is commonly prescribed by transplant hematologists and oncologists as prophylaxis against Candida infections. In this context, the prescribing physician is the transplant team managing the bone marrow transplant, not a separate referral. If you are undergoing or have recently undergone an HSCT and have concerns about your antifungal prophylaxis, speak directly with your transplant physician.
Hospitalists and Intensivists (ICU Physicians)
Hospital-based general medicine physicians (hospitalists) and intensive care specialists may prescribe micafungin as part of initial empiric management in critically ill patients suspected of having invasive fungal infections, before an ID consultation occurs. These physicians are hospital-based and are accessed automatically when you are admitted to an inpatient unit or ICU.
Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants
NPs and PAs working within infectious disease practices, transplant programs, or oncology units may also prescribe micafungin within their scope of practice. If you are receiving outpatient infusion therapy and your follow-up is with a mid-level provider, they may manage your prescription refills and treatment duration under the supervising physician's protocol.
Can Micafungin Be Prescribed via Telehealth?
Not as an initial treatment. Because micafungin requires intravenous administration in a clinical setting, it cannot be prescribed and initiated through a telehealth visit alone. The diagnosis of candidemia or invasive candidiasis requires laboratory testing (blood cultures, tissue biopsies) and clinical assessment that must occur in person. However, once therapy is established, follow-up monitoring appointments may be conducted via telehealth in some health systems.
How to Get Referred to an Infectious Disease Specialist
Most patients receiving micafungin are already in the hospital when the medication is initiated. However, if you are a patient with a chronic fungal infection or a history of candidemia who needs ongoing outpatient antifungal management:
Ask your primary care physician for a referral to an infectious disease specialist. Most ID practices require a referral from a primary care physician or another specialist.
Check with your hospital's infectious disease department. Many academic medical centers and large hospitals have ID outpatient clinics that manage complex antifungal therapy.
Use your insurance's provider directory. Search for board-certified infectious disease specialists in your area who are in-network with your insurance plan.
Contact the IDSA (Infectious Diseases Society of America) at idsociety.org for a physician finder tool that lists board-certified ID specialists by location.
What to Tell Your Doctor
When you see an infectious disease specialist, bring the following information to your appointment:
All recent lab results, blood culture reports, and imaging studies
A complete list of all current medications including immunosuppressants (cyclosporine, tacrolimus, sirolimus) and dose details
Your complete medical history including organ transplantation, cancer diagnoses, or immunodeficiency conditions
Any prior antifungal use and your response or tolerance to those treatments
Your insurance information and home infusion capabilities, especially if outpatient treatment is likely
What Happens After You Start Micafungin?
Once micafungin therapy begins, you will typically be monitored with repeat blood cultures, liver function tests, kidney function tests, and a complete blood count. These labs help your physician assess your response to therapy, catch any emerging side effects early, and determine when it is safe to step down to oral antifungal therapy or discontinue treatment altogether.
For more information about how micafungin works and what to expect from treatment, read our guide: What Is Micafungin? Uses, Dosage, and What You Need to Know in 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
In most cases, yes. Micafungin is prescribed by infectious disease specialists, transplant physicians, hematologists/oncologists, hospitalists, or intensivists. It is rarely prescribed by primary care physicians because its indications (candidemia, invasive candidiasis) require specialized diagnosis and management. Ask your PCP for a referral to an infectious disease specialist if you think you may need antifungal treatment.
Not as initial therapy. Because micafungin requires IV administration and diagnosis of serious fungal infections requires in-person testing, it cannot be initiated through telehealth. Follow-up monitoring visits may sometimes be conducted via telehealth once therapy is established, depending on your health system's protocols.
Infectious disease (ID) physicians are the primary specialists who manage candidemia (Candida bloodstream infections). They guide antifungal selection, monitor treatment response, and determine duration of therapy. An ID consultation is standard of care for all patients with confirmed candidemia.
You can find a board-certified infectious disease specialist through the IDSA physician finder (idsociety.org), your insurance plan's provider directory, or by asking your primary care physician for a referral. Most major hospitals also have outpatient infectious disease clinics.
No. Micafungin can be administered in hospitals (inpatient), outpatient infusion centers, or through home infusion services where a nurse visits your home daily to administer the IV. Home infusion is common for patients who are clinically stable but require an extended course of treatment.
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