| Literature DB >> 24378231 |
David R Boulware, Melissa A Rolfes, Radha Rajasingham, Maximilian von Hohenberg, Zhenpeng Qin, Kabanda Taseera, Charlotte Schutz, Richard Kwizera, Elissa K Butler, Graeme Meintjes, Conrad Muzoora, John C Bischof, David B Meya.
Abstract
Cryptococcal meningitis is common in sub-Saharan Africa. Given the need for data for a rapid, point-of-care cryptococcal antigen (CRAG) lateral flow immunochromatographic assay (LFA), we assessed diagnostic performance of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) culture, CRAG latex agglutination, India ink microscopy, and CRAG LFA for 832 HIV-infected persons with suspected meningitis during 2006-2009 (n = 299) in Uganda and during 2010-2012 (n = 533) in Uganda and South Africa. CRAG LFA had the best performance (sensitivity 99.3%, specificity 99.1%). Culture sensitivity was dependent on CSF volume (82.4% for 10 μL, 94.2% for 100 μL). CRAG latex agglutination test sensitivity (97.0%-97.8%) and specificity (85.9%-100%) varied between manufacturers. India ink microscopy was 86% sensitive. Laser thermal contrast had 92% accuracy (R = 0.91, p<0.001) in quantifying CRAG titers from 1 LFA strip to within <1.5 dilutions of actual CRAG titers. CRAG LFA is a major advance for meningitis diagnostics in resource-limited settings.Entities:
Keywords: Cryptococcus spp.; HIV; India ink microscopy; South Africa; Uganda; cerebrospinal fluid; cryptococcal antigen; cryptococcal antigen latex agglutination; cryptococcal meningitis; culture; diagnostic techniques; fungi; laser thermal contrast measurement; lateral flow immunochromatographic assay; point-of-care systems; sensitivity; specificity; validation studies
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24378231 PMCID: PMC3884728 DOI: 10.3201/eid2001.130906
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Five steps of the cryptococcal antigen lateral flow assay.
Demographic characteristics and diagnostic tests performed with specimens from meningitis cohorts, Uganda and South Africa*
| Characteristic | 2006–2009, Retrospective | 2010–2012, Prospective* | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic | Kampala, Uganda | Kampala, Uganda | Mbarara, Uganda | Cape Town, South Africa |
| Location | ||||
| No. persons | 299 | 354 | 142 | 37 |
| Mean ± SD age, y | 36 ± 8 | 35 ± 9 | 35 ± 11 | 37 ± 10 |
| Male sex, no. (%) | 168 (56) | 174 (49) | 87 (61) | 22 (59) |
| CD4 cell count/μL median (IQR) | 19 (7–38) | 16 (7–69) | 36 (14–74) | 65 (43–97) |
| Diagnostic tests performed, no. | ||||
| CSF | ||||
| Quantitative culture | 282 | 345 | 142 | 37 |
| Latex agglutination | 279 | 345 | 142 | 37 |
| India ink microscopy | 276 | 350 | 142 | 37 |
| LFA | 197 | 291 | 142 | 36 |
| Serum | ||||
| Latex agglutination | 85 | 34 | NA | NA |
| LFA | NA | 274 | 49 | 23 |
| Plasma | ||||
| LFA | 60 | NA | NA | NA |
| Urine | ||||
| LFA | NA | 185 | 51 | NA |
*IQR, interquartile range; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; LFA, lateral flow immunochromatographic assay; NA, not available. †Prospective testing with LFA because point-of-care began in April 2011. Eighty LFAs were conducted on cryopreserved samples.
Performance characteristics of cryptococcal diagnostic assays in persons with suspected meningitis, Uganda and South Africa*
| Diagnostic test | No. | No. positive/no. tested (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Specificity | PPV | NPV | ||
| CRAG LFA | 666 | 435/438 (99.3) | 226/228 (99.1) | 435/437 (99.5) | 226/229 (98.7) |
| CSF culture† | 806 | 459/510 (90.0) | 296/296 (100.0) | 459/459 (100.0) | 296/347 (85.3) |
| 100-μL volume | 524 | 309/328 (94.2) | 196/196 (100.0) | 309/309 (100.0) | 196/215 (91.2) |
| 10-μL volume | 282 | 150/182 (82.4) | 100/100 (100.0) | 150/150 (100.0) | 100/132 (75.8) |
| India ink microscopy | 805 | 438/509 (86.1) | 288/296 (97.3) | 438/446 (98.2) | 288/359 (80.2) |
| CRAG latex (Meridian)‡ | 279 | 176/180 (97.8) | 85/99 (85.9) | 176/190 (92.6) | 85/89 (95.5) |
| CRAG latex (Immy)§ | 749 | 452/466 (97.0) | 283/283 (100.0) | 452/452 (100.0) | 283/297 (95.3) |
*PPV, positive predictive value; NPV, negative predictive value; CRAG, cryptococcal antigen: LFA, lateral flow immunochromatographic assay; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid. All samples tested by CSF CRAG LFA had false-positive results and did not have any other pathogen identified. However, serum or plasma samples were not available for testing for cryptococcal antigenemia to determine if the original result indicated enhanced detection. †Two quantitative CSF culture procedures were used in 2006–2009 (input volume 10 μL) and 2010–2012 (input volume 100 μL). ‡Meridian, Cincinnati, OH, USA. §Immy, Inc., Norman, OK, USA.
Figure 2Venn diagram of distribution of 393 cryptococcal meningitis cases tested by 4 diagnostic assays, Uganda and South Africa. CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; CRAG LFA, cryptococcal antigen lateral immunochromatographic flow assay; India ink, India ink microscopy of 1 mL of concentrated CSF specimen. Numbers at the bottom right indicate 2 scenarios in which the Venn diagram does not overlap visually.
Characteristics of CSF specimens with false-negative results by cryptococcal antigen lateral flow immunochromatographic assay, 2006–2009 cohort, Uganda and South Africa*
| CSF culture, CFU/mL | India ink microscopy | CSF latex agglutination test dilution† | CSF CRAG LFA |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | – | 1:2 Meridian; 1:1 Immy | –‡ |
| 0 | + | 1:2 Meridian; 1:1 Immy | –‡ |
| 0 | + | 1:2 Meridian; 1:1 Immy | –‡ |
*CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; CRAG, cryptococcal antigen; LFA, lateral flow immunochromatographic assay; CFU, colony-forming units of Cryptococcus neoformans; –, negative; +, positive. †Meridian, Cincinnati, OH, USA; Immy, Inc., Norman, OK, USA. ‡Retrospectively performed with cryopreserved specimens.
Characteristics of CSF specimens positive only by cryptococcal antigen lateral flow immunochromatographic assay, Uganda and South Africa*
| Cohort | CSF LFA titer | Serum CRAG LFA titer | Serum CRAG latex titer | Urine LFA result | Classification | Patient outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006–2009 | 2 | NA | NA | NA | LFA false positive | Unknown |
|
| 2 | NA | NA | NA | LFA false positive | Unknown |
| 2010–2012 | 2 | 512 | 1:8 | – | Cryptococcal meningitis | Began ART; CSF culture-positive result; meningitis developed 6 weeks later |
| ± | 2,048 | 2,048 | – | Cryptococcal meningitis | Died after hospital discharge | |
| ± | 32 | – | + | Cryptococcal meningitis | Died in hospital | |
| 250 | 4 | – | + | Cryptococcal meningitis | Began ART; minimum CD4 cell count 130 cells/μL | |
| 8 | 8 | 128 | – | Cryptococcal meningitis | Died after hospital discharge | |
| ±/16† | 4,096 | 2,048 | + | Cryptococcal meningitis | Given fluconazole, 800 mg/d; seizure; died; cryptococcoma mass identified postmortem |
*CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; CRAG, cryptococcal antigen; LFA, lateral flow immunochromatographic assay; –, negative’ NA, not available; ART, antiretroviral therapy; ±, discordant readings by 2 independent readers; +, positive. All test results for CSF culture, India ink microscopy, and CSF CRAG latex were negative. †Fresh specimen was CRAG latex and LFA negative. CRAG LFA titer of 16 on cryopreserved specimen. Repeat CSF testing results 2 weeks later for neurologic deterioration were positive and remained CRAG latex negative. Thermal contrast showed that all LFA strips had positive results with readings above background.
Figure 3A) Prediction of cryptococcal antigen titer based on laser thermal contrast measurement and concept of lateral flow immunochromatographic assay (LFA) thermal contrast measurement in which a laser irradiates the test line in the LFA (). The test line is formed by gold–monoclonal antibody–antigen sandwich complex with a monoclonal antibody affixed at the test line. When irradiated by a green laser (532 nm), any gold present absorbs light from the laser and generates heat in direct proportion to the amount of gold (and thereby antigen) present at the test line. This temperature change can be measured by using an infrared camera. B) Association of measured semiquantitative LFA cryptococcal antigen (CRAG) titer starting at a 1:250 dilution by the predicted CRAG titer based on thermal contrast measurement. Measurements on the negative portion of the x-axis are beyond the visual range when specimens were diluted 1:250, yet still detectable by thermal contrast. The Pearson correlation coefficient was r = 0.91 (p<0.001, R2 = 0.84) among 115 positive specimens quantified. A total of 58 LFA CRAG–negative specimens established background levels of heat radiation.