| Literature DB >> 30510235 |
Brian L Wickes1, Nathan P Wiederhold2.
Abstract
Diagnosing fungal infections poses a number of unique problems, including a decline in expertise needed for identifying fungi, and a reduced number of instruments and assays specific for fungal identification compared to that of bacteria and viruses.These problems are exacerbated by the fact that patients with fungal infections are often immunosuppressed, which predisposes to infections from both commonly and rarely seen fungi. In this review, we discuss current and future molecular technologies used for fungal identification, and some of the problems associated with development and implementation of these technologies in today's clinical microbiology laboratories.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30510235 PMCID: PMC6277409 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-07556-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Preferred characteristics of new diagnostic assays
| Optimal criteria | Importance | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Platform characteristics | ||
| Low capital cost | Medium | Cost should fit clinical laboratory budgets |
| Ease of maintenance | Medium | User serviceable or low service contract cost |
| Ease of operation | High | No special skills outside of basic lab skills |
| Small footprint/portable | Medium | Not hardwired, ventilated, or plumbed |
| Expandable | Medium | Handles single or multiple samples, high throughput adaptable, assay reagents easily adjusted for sample number |
| Updateable | High | New organism profiles can be easily added to data libraries or assays by user or vendor |
| Versatile | Medium | Adaptable for other uses |
| High precision and accuracy | High | Assays should be reproducible with little variation and an accurate reflection of the true value (matches reference standard) |
| Data output | High | Fungus name or +/– result, no downstream analysis or data manipulation required |
| Input sample characteristics | ||
| Broad input source (pure culture, human tissue or fluids, non-viable cells) | Low | Does not require organisms to be purified away from tissue, low interference from background material |
| Sample preparation part of platform | High | Standardized sample preparation with few or no user manipulations |
| Works on live or dead cells | Medium | Advantageous for fixed tissue samples |
| Works with yeast and mold morphologies | Medium | Assay or platform should not be affected by physical characteristics of culture |
| Assay characteristics | ||
| Cost | High | Inexpensive reagents with a long shelf life, easy storage |
| Rapid turnaround time | Medium | Easily completed in single work shift, 3<h optimal |
| High sensitivity and specificity | High | Approach 100% |
| Positive and negative predictive values | High | Approach 1.0 |
| Quantitative | Low | Allows clinicians to monitor treatment effectiveness |
| Detects and discriminates multiple analytes | Low | Able to output multiple identifications |
| Wide reportable range | Medium | Detects minute amounts but maintains linear response over broad range of target amounts |
| High analytical sensitivity | High | Demonstrates very low limit of detection |
Fig. 1FDA approval pathways for medical devices. The approval process is based on risk to patients, with higher risk requiring more regulatory control. The FDA assists in the classification process through their database, which contains almost 2000 generic medical devices organized into 16 different panels. Classification is determined in part by location of the device on the patient, duration of device contact with the patient, and whether the device will be active or passive (active devices require power, usually electrical). Class I devices are the lowest risk and most are exempt from premarket notification. The device and company must be registered with the FDA but approval is not required. Class II devices need FDA clearance through the 510(k) premarket notification (PMN) process. Class III devices need premarket approval (PMA) and usually clinical trials. Examples of fungal devices (bold) are the PhenoTest BC (Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.), which identifies Candida albicans and Candida glabrata, the Fungitell assay for fungal β-d-glucan (Associates of Cape Cod, Inc.), and the T2Candida assay (T2 Biosystems, Inc.), which identifies five species of Candida from blood cultures
Strengths and weaknesses of different platforms
| Methodology | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|
| PCR | Amplifies low target amounts | Requires purified template |
| Sequence | Highest specificity | High capital costs (for in house instrument) |
| Whole-genome sequence | Highest specificity | High capital cost |
| Hybridization | Multiplex to megaplex capability | Can be high complexity |
| Mass Spectroscopy | Results in minutes | High capital costs |
Fig. 2DNA sequence encoding fungal ribosomal RNAs. The genes for fungal rRNAs are organized as a repeating unit. A single unit consists of the sequence encoding the 18S rRNA (for the small ribosomal subunit), internal transcribed spacer 1, sequence encoding the 5.8S rRNA, internal transcribed spacer 2, sequence encoding the 28S rRNA (for the large ribosomal subunit), intergenic sequence 1, sequence encoding the 5S rRNA, and intergenic sequence 2. The 18S, ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2, and 28S sequences are transcribed as a single RNA, which is then spliced to remove the ITS1 and ITS2 regions (blue cylinders) prior to assembly with the 5S rRNA into the complete ribosome consisting of the 18S, 5.8S, 28S, 5S (green cylinders) and assorted proteins. The ITS1 and ITS2 regions make up the ITS sequence, which is generally ~600bp in length although it can vary by more than 200bp. The D1/D2 region (blue shaded region on 28S) is similar in length. Both regions are informative with regard to sequence identification although the D1/D2 region is usually more conserved. Priming sites for PCR are shown as black arrowheads and can be used in various combinations. The 5S sequence is transcribed separately and is flanked by the two IGS regions (brown cylinders), which can be very informative, however, they vary tremendously in size, making amplification by PCR difficult
Examples of molecular assays for fungal infections with FDA clearance for clinical use or CE-IVD marked for use in Europe
| Assay (manufacturer) | Assay methods | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| AccuProbe Coccidioides, Blastomyces, and Histoplasma Culture Identification Tests (Hologic) | Chemiluminescent labeled, single-stranded DNA probe | •Rapid identification of dimorphic fungi, including | •Requires growing culture of fungus |
| Yeast Traffic Light and Quick FISH (AdvanDx) | PNA-FISH | •Relatively fast turnaround time from positive blood culture bottle | •Requires positive blood culture bottle |
| BioFire Film Array (bioMerieux) | Nested multiplex PCR with DNA melt-curve analysis | •Blood culture ID (BCID; for | •Requires positive blood culture bottle for BCID |
| T2Candida (T2Biosystems) | PCR with nuclear magnetic resonance | •Can be performed directly on blood | •Limited number of |
| SeptiFast LightCycler (Roche) | Real-time PCR with DNA melt-curve analysis | •High analytical sensitivity | •Limited number of |
| AsperGenius (PathoNostics) | Multiplex real-time PCR | •Detects | •Limited number of |
| MycAssay | Real-time PCR with molecular beacons | •Eighteen different | •Not currently available for clinical use in US |
Clinical sensitivity and specificity were obtained from assay information provided by vendor or by publication as indicated.