| Literature DB >> 30687264 |
Sabina Herrera1, Shahid Husain1.
Abstract
As the number of lung transplants performed worldwide each year continues to grow, the success of this procedure is threatened by the incidence of non-CMV infections such as invasive aspergillosis. Despite tremendous efforts and the availability of numerous diagnostic tests (especially in hematological malignancies) the diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis continues to be a challenge. Lung transplantation remains a unique clinical scenario, where additional host defenses are immunocompromized, making many of the available tests unsuitable. In this review we will navigate through the myriad of diagnostic tests currently available and how they apply to this unique patient population, as well as have a look into what the future holds.Entities:
Keywords: Aspergillus; BDglucan; PCR; cytokines; galactomannan; immunocompromized; invasive aspergillosis; lung transplant
Year: 2019 PMID: 30687264 PMCID: PMC6333628 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.03273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Summary of human studies assessing galactomannan, BD-glucan and Aspergillus PRC in lung transplantation.
| Study | Number patients recruited | Sample | Sensitivity | Specificity | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 197 LTR | EBC | GM detectable in EBC but no correlation with IA | |||
| 3344 Patients or controls (614 with IPA) | BAL | 87% | 89% | Meta-analysis including 30 studies until 2012, mainly hematological but also SOT | |
| 60 LTRs, 8 with probable or proven IPA | BAL | 100% | 40% | Increasing the cutoff to 1.5 improved the specificity (90.4%) maintaining sensitivity | |
| 11 Patients and 185 controls (119 LTRs) | BAL | 81.8% | 95.8% | Higher specificity with cut-off of 1.0 (96.6%) | |
| 5 Patients with IPA and 76 controls (16 LTRs) | BAL | 100% | 90.8% | The sensitivity of BAL GM testing was better than serum GM or BAL cytology and culture. Increasing the cutoff to ≥1 improved the specificity (90.8%) | |
| 116 LTR, 6 with probable or proven IPA | BAL | 60% | 95% | Increasing the index cutoff value to 1.0 or more yielded a sensitivity of 60%, a specificity of 98% | |
| Serum | 71% | 85% | Meta-analysis including 27 studies from 1996 to 2005, mainly hematological but also SOT | ||
| 195 Samples LTR, and 10 episodes of IPA | BAL | 80% | 53% | Using 41 pg/ml as cut-off, sensitivity and specificity improved to 75 and 91%, respectively, at a 524 pg/ml cut-off | |
| 135 SOT patients including LTR | BAL and serum | 79.2% 79.2% | 38.5% 81.8% | 233 BAL and 109 serum specimens. Multicenter studies. 135 SOT patients, 114 LTRs. Based on a 100-pg/ml positive cutoff | |
| 14 LTRs with proven or probable IFI and 59 LTRs controls | Serum | 71% | 59% | 756 Specimens from 59 subjects without IFI and 41 specimens from 14 patients with proven or probable IFI. Based on a 60-pg/ml positive cutoff | |
| 9 SOT and 33 patients with HM | Lung and skin | 82% | 79% | Sensitivity of the MycAssay | |
| 150 LTRs (16 proven/probable IPA, 26 colonized, 11 non- | BAL | 100% | 88% | The sensitivity and specificity of |
Figure 1Hypothetic algorithm of future diagnosis and management of invasive aspergillosis.