| Literature DB >> 29463043 |
Cornelius J Clancy1, M Hong Nguyen2.
Abstract
Blood cultures are positive for Candida species in < 50% and < 20% of hematogenously disseminated and intra-abdominal candidiasis, respectively. Non-culture tests such as mannan, anti-mannan antibody, Candida albicans germ tube antibody (CAGTA), 1,3-β-d-glucan (BDG), the T2Candida nanodiagnostic panel, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) are available for clinical use, but their roles in patient care are uncertain. Sensitivity/specificity of combined mannan/anti-mannan, BDG, T2Candida and PCR for candidemia are ~80%/80%, ~80%/80%, ~90%/98%, and ~90%/90%, respectively. Limited data for intra-abdominal candidiasis suggest CAGTA, BDG sensitivity/specificity of ~65%/75% and PCR sensitivity of ~85-90%. PCR specificity has varied widely for intra-abdominal candidiasis (33-97%), and T2Candida data are lacking. Tests will be useful if restricted to cases in which positive and negative predictive values (PPVs, NPVs) differ in a clinically meaningful way from the pre-test likelihood of invasive candidiasis. In some patients, PPVs are sufficient to justify antifungal treatment, even if blood cultures are negative. In most patients, NPVs of each test are excellent, which may support decisions to withhold antifungal therapy. If test results are not interpreted judiciously, non-culture diagnostics may have unintended consequences for stewardship and infection prevention programs. In particular, discrepant non-culture test-positive/culture-negative results may promote inappropriate antifungal treatment of patients who are unlikely to have candidiasis, and lead to spurious reporting of hospital-acquired infections. In conclusion, non-culture Candida diagnostics have potential to advance patient care, but this promise will be realized only if users understand tests' strengths and limitations, and plan proactively for how best to employ them at their hospitals.Entities:
Keywords: 1,3-β-d-glucan; Bayesian; Candida; T2Candida; candidemia; candidiasis; diagnostic; polymerase chain reaction
Year: 2018 PMID: 29463043 PMCID: PMC5872330 DOI: 10.3390/jof4010027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Prevalence of candidemia in different populations, and anticipated PPVs and NPVs of non-culture tests.
| Prevalence | Representative Patient (Reference) | 1 BDG, Mannan/Anti-Mannan | 2 T2Candida | 3 PCR | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PPV | NPV | PPV | NPV | PPV | NPV | ||
| Any hospitalized patient in whom a blood culture is collected [ | 1% | 99.9% | 15% | >99.9% | 3% | >99.9% | |
| Patient admitted to intensive care unit (ICU) [ | 4% | 99.7% | 31% | 99.9% | 8% | 99.9% | |
| Patient with febrile neutropenia, baseline rate of candidemia prior to empiric antifungal treatment [ | 7% | 99.5% | 47% | 99.8% | 99.8% | ||
| Patient with septic shock and > 3–7 days in ICU [ | 11% | 99.2% | 67% | 99.7% | 22% | 99.7% | |
| Patient with left ventricular assist device and evidence of active infection [ | 17% | 98.7% | 70% | 99.5% | 32% | 99.5% | |
| Patient fulfilling criteria of clinical prediction model for candidemia [ | 31% | 97% | 82% | 99% | 50% | 99% | |
Sensitivity and specificity for candidemia for each test are estimated from studies cited in the text. 1 Sensitivity/specificity: 80%/80%; Data for CAGTA are more limited, but performance for the diagnosis of candidemia complicated by deep-seated candidiasis appears to be comparable to mannan/anti-mannan and BDG. 2 Sensitivity/specificity: 90%/98%; 3 Sensitivity/specificity: 90%/90%; PPV: Positive predictive value; NPV: Negative predictive value; PPVs and NPVs within the dark black lines signify patients in whom non-culture testing may have greatest clinical utility, assuming that antifungal treatment is justified at a threshold likelihood of invasive candidiasis of ≥~15–30%. For the patients indicated, a positive result is anticipated to move the likelihood of candidemia from below the threshold to above the threshold. At the same time, negative tests make candidemia extremely unlikely (≤3% probability). The precise borders of the box may vary somewhat, depending on where within the 15–30% range the threshold value is set. Treatment interventions based on this conceptual framework warrant validation in clinical trials.
Prevalence of intra-abdominal candidiasis in different populations, and anticipated PPVs and NPVs of non-culture tests.
| Prevalence | Representative Patient | PCR | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 BDG, CAGTA | 2 Leon et al. [ | 3 Nguyen et al. [ | 4 Fortun et al. [ | ||||||
| PPV | NPV | PPV | NPV | PPV | NPV | PPV | NPV | ||
| 5% [ | - Low-to-moderate risk peritoneal dialysis patient with peritonitis | 12% | 97.6% | 6% | 97.7% | 13% | 98.9% | 59% | 99.2% |
| 10% [ | - Patient with emergent surgery for intra-abdominal infection | 22% | 95% | 12% | 95.2% | 24% | 97.7% | 76% | 98.3% |
| 20% [ | - Patient (non-neutropenic) in SICU ≥ 7 days with abdominal surgery 5 | 39% | 89.6% | 24% | 89.9% | 41% | 94.9% | 88% | 97.5% |
| 30% [ | - Patient who has undergone high-risk GI/hepatobiliary surgery | 53% | 83% | 35% | 83.7% | 55% | 91.6% | 93% | 93.8% |
Sensitivity and specificity of BDG and CAGTA are estimated as median values from the four studies of deep-seated candidiasis cited in the text. Sensitivity and specificity of PCR are estimated from the three studies of deep-seated candidiasis [7,8,13]. Sensitivity was rounded to 85% here for comparative purposes. There are no data on the performance of T2Candida for the diagnosis of deep-seated candidiasis, in the absence of candidemia. 1 Sensitivity/specificity: 65%/75%; 2 Sensitivity/specificity: 85%/33%; 3 Sensitivity/specificity: 85%/70% 4 Sensitivity/specificity: 85%/97%; 5 These patients may develop intra-abdominal candidiasis and/or candidemia. Candida score is a predictive model for invasive candidiasis that considers clinical variables, risk factors for candidiasis, and Candida colonization, which was developed by Leon et al. [44]. PCR: polymerase chain reaction; BDG: 1,3-β-d-glucan; PPV: Positive predictive value; NPV: Negative predictive value; GI: gastrointestinal. PPVs and NPVs within the dark black lines signify patients in whom non-culture testing may have greatest clinical utility, assuming that antifungal treatment is justified at a threshold likelihood of invasive candidiasis of ≥~15–30%. For these patients, a positive result is anticipated to move the likelihood of intra-abdominal candidiasis from below the threshold to above the threshold. At the same time, negative tests should assure that the likelihood of intrabdominal candidiasis is less than the threshold. The precise borders of the box may vary somewhat, depending on where within the 15–30% range the threshold value is set. Treatment interventions based on this conceptual framework warrant validation in clinical trials.