| Literature DB >> 24947167 |
Abstract
The diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis is challenging because no sufficiently sensitive or specific tests have been developed to date. Infection can only be confirmed using histology, although this approach is unavailable in many patients. Therefore, diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis is based on a combination of the presence of host factors, radiological and clinical findings, and mycological criteria. In clinical practice, lack of optimal diagnostics often leads to empirical therapy and great cost and toxicity. Mycological criteria include the isolation of Aspergillus from clinical samples or the detection of biomarkers in fluids. Culture is cheap and easy and enables the identification of fungi and performance of antifungal susceptibility testing; however, it has low sensitivity and specificity. Non-culture-based diagnosis is based on the detection of fungal biomarkers such as galactomannan or (1 → 3)-β-D-glucan in normally sterile body fluids. These procedures enable faster and more sensitive and specific detection of Aspergillus; however, diagnostic accuracy is affected by the patient's underlying condition. Finally, while detection of Aspergillus DNA is promising, the lack of standardization limits its inclusion as a mycological criterion for the definition of probable invasive aspergillosis. New diagnostic procedures based on lateral flow technology are also promising but need further evaluation. In the present review, we discuss current culture-based and non-culture-based procedures for the microbiological diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24947167 DOI: 10.1007/s11046-014-9763-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mycopathologia ISSN: 0301-486X Impact factor: 2.574