| Literature DB >> 29619020 |
Jochem B Buil1,2, Jan Zoll1,2, Paul E Verweij1,2, Willem J G Melchers1,2.
Abstract
Aspergillus diseases are often caused by Aspergillus fumigatus. Azoles are the mainstay of therapy, but the management of aspergillosis is hampered by the emergence of azole resistance. Rapid detection of azole resistance might benefit treatment outcome by early treatment modifications. However, the yield of fungal culture in invasive aspergillosis is low and susceptibility testing requires several days to be completed. To overcome the low yield of fungal cultures and slow detection of resistance, it is possible to use molecular tools directly on clinical specimens in order to rapidly detect molecular markers of azole resistance. Molecular tools to detect resistant markers in the Cyp51A gene can be expected to be less sensitive compared to molecular tools to detect Aspergillus DNA as the Cyp51A gene is a single copy gene and the target for Aspergillus DNA is often a multi-copy gene. In this mini-review, we summarize the current molecular tools for detection of azole-resistant A. fumigatus directly in clinical material. Several in-house PCR assays have been applied directly on clinical material. Furthermore, two assays are commercial available; the AsperGenius and MycoGENIE. The amplification of resistance markers was successful in 70-100% of samples that were positive for Aspergillus DNA in BAL samples using the AsperGenius assay. Despite using several samples per patient, amplification of resistance markers was only successful in 33-57% of patients with Aspergillus DNA in blood. Furthermore, several sequence based methods have been applied with the benefit of the ability to detect other Cyp51A gene alterations.Entities:
Keywords: Aspergillus fumigatus; antifungal; azole; azole resistance; diagnostics; polymerase chain reaction
Year: 2018 PMID: 29619020 PMCID: PMC5871680 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.00515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Overview of studies that applied real-time PCR assays directly on clinical specimen to detect azole resistance markers in Aspergillus fumigatus.
| Country | Patients samples | Resistance markers | PCR system | Remarks | Positivity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netherlands | Tissue (FFPE) from single case | TR34, L98H | In-house | 1 | ||
| United Kingdom | Selection of 29 | TR34, L98H, G54, G138C, M220 | In-house | Nested amplification of target with qPCR with allele specific molecular beacons. Primer and probe sequences not published | 29 | |
| Denmark | 94 BAL samples from 87 patients | TR34, L98H, G54, G138C, M220, G448S | In-house | Assay described by | 41 | |
| Netherlands | BAL | TR34, L98H, Y121F, T289A | AsperGenius | LoD species at <36 | 16 | |
| United Kingdom | Serum | TR34, L98H, Y121F, T289A | AsperGenius | LoD of species and resistance assay was 10 and >75 genomes | 25 | |
| Netherlands | BAL | TR34, L98H, Y121F, T289A | AsperGenius | LoD species at <38 | 97 | |
| Belgium | BAL samples of which 45 GM positive | TR34, L98H, Y121F, T289A | AsperGenius | LoD species at <36 | 20 | |
| United Kingdom | Plasma of 12 patients | TR34, L98H, Y121F, T289A | AsperGenius | LoD of species and resistance assay was 10 and 50 genomes. Meanly 7 samples per patient. | 6 patients | |
| France | Respiratory + Serum | TR34, L98H | MycoGENIE | LoD of species and resistance assay was 1 and 6 genomes. | Respiratory: 55 | |
| France | Respiratory | TR34 | MycoGENIE | No WT | 106/136 | |
| Netherlands | Respiratory samples. 91 samples tested. Three cases with co-infection described | TR34, L98H, Y121F, T289A | AsperGenius | In one case both resistant and susceptible isolates cultured. No sequence information of isolates available. | 72 | |
Overview of studies that applied non-real-time molecular tools directly on clinical specimen to detect azole resistance markers in A. fumigatus.
| Country | Patients samples | Resistance markers | PCR system | Remarks | Positivity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 56 whole blood samples | G54 | Pyrosequencing | No control was available for sequence results | 2 | |
| Germany | BAL fluid and tissue samples from 8 patients positive for | TR34, L98H, M220 | Sequencing | 8 | ||
| Germany | Serum, BAL, tissue from 155 patients | TR34/L98H/TR46/M220 | TR34 M220 TR46 nested sequenced based | LoD: L98H, 300fg. TR46, 300fg. Other assays: | 181 | |
| France | 97 respiratory samples | TR34, L98H, G54, G138C, M220 | Sequencing | 44 | ||