| Literature DB >> 31569472 |
Amir Arastehfar1, Brian L Wickes2, Macit Ilkit3, David H Pincus4, Farnaz Daneshnia5, Weihua Pan6, Wenjie Fang7, Teun Boekhout8,9,10.
Abstract
Extensive advances in technology offer a vast variety of diagnostic methods that save time and costs, but identification of fungal species causing human infections remains challenging in developing countries. Since the echinocandins, antifungals widely used to treat invasive mycoses, are still unavailable in developing countries where a considerable number of problematic fungal species are present, rapid and reliable identification is of paramount importance. Unaffordability, large footprints, lack of skilled personnel, and high costs associated with maintenance and infrastructure are the main factors precluding the establishment of high-precision technologies that can replace inexpensive yet time-consuming and inaccurate phenotypic methods. In addition, point-of-care lateral flow assay tests are available for the diagnosis of Aspergillus and Cryptococcus and are highly relevant for developing countries. An Aspergillus galactomannan lateral flow assay is also now available. Real-time PCR remains difficult to standardize and is not widespread in countries with limited resources. Isothermal and conventional PCR-based amplification assays may be alternative solutions. The combination of real-time PCR and serological assays can significantly increase diagnostic efficiency. However, this approach is too expensive for medical institutions in developing countries. Further advances in next-generation sequencing and other innovative technologies such as clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-based diagnostic tools may lead to efficient, alternate methods that can be used in point-of-care assays, which may supplement or replace some of the current technologies and improve the diagnostics of fungal infections in developing countries.Entities:
Keywords: Nanopore sequencing; molecular tools; phenotypic assays; serology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31569472 PMCID: PMC6958481 DOI: 10.3390/jof5040090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Morphological differentiation of some yeast and yeast-like species similar in their biochemical reactivity profiles.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| - | - | - | - | - |
|
| + | - | - | - | - |
|
| + | + | - | - | - |
| - | - | - | - | + | |
|
| - | + | + | - | - |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| + | + | - | + | - |
|
| + | - | - | - | - |
|
| + | - | - | - | - |
|
| + | + | - | - | - |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| V | - | - | - | - |
|
| - | - | - | - | - |
|
| + | + | + | - | - |
* PH, pseudohyphae; TH, true hyphae; AR, arthroconidia; CH, chlamydospores; SP, sporangiospores; +, present; -, absent; V, variable.
Diagnostic features of phenotypic methods useful for the identification of yeasts and yeast-like pathogens in developing countries [24].
| Method | % Sensitivity | % Specificity | TAT | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rapid screening tests, e.g., β-galactosaminidase for identification of | 97.8–100.0 | 85.7–100.0 | 5–60 min | [ |
| Rapid screening tests, e.g., trehalase for identification of | 89.3–100.0 | 74.1–100.0 | 30 s–24 h | [ |
| Chromogenic agars, e.g., CHROMagar Candida, chromID Candida for identification of | 88.3–100.0 | 86.0–100.0 | 48 h | [ |
| Manual biochemical methods, e.g., api 20C AUX, ID32C, rapID Yeast Plus | N/A | 86.0–100.0 | 4–72 h | [ |
| Automated biochemical methods, e.g., MicroScan YID, VITEK 2 YST | N/A | 85.3–98.5 | 4–48 h | [ |
TAT, turn-around time; N/A, not applicable. As the price for the phenotypic assays included are profoundly affected by the order scale and the tax amount, there is not a definitive price and it can vary from one country and one site to another.
Diagnostic properties of isothermal amplification-based techniques useful for cost-effective detection of fungal pathogens in developing countries.
| Isothermal Approach | Sensitivity | Specificity | TAT | Quantification | Cost | Sample Source | Multiplexing | Easy Optimization | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LAMP (conventional, intercalating dyes, and probes) | 470 pg–0.2 fg | Controversial | 120–60 min | No | 3.2–5.3 Euros/rxn | Pure culture, clinical samples, simulated environmental and clinical samples | Yes | No/Yes | [ |
| RCA-Padlock probes/RCA-Padlock probes+ Seminested-PCR | 100 µg–40 fg A copies | Specific | 300–120 min | No | 2–5 USD/rxn | Pure culture, clinical samples, simulated environmental and clinical samples | No | No/Yes | [ |
| RPA | 230 pg | Specific | 40 min | No | 4.25 USD/rxn | Pure culture/clinical samples | No | No | [ |
| NASBA | <10 fg ≤ 100 ag | Specific to minor CR | 360–120 min | Yes | NI | Clinical samples, simulated blood sample, and samples from animal models | No | No | [ |
TAT, turn-around time; pg, picogram; fg, femtogram; ag, atomgram; NI, Not-indicated; rxn, reaction. A The optimal sensitivity of this technique was provided by the combination of RCA probes and semi-nested PCR. Considering that 105 cells are equal to 1 ng, all copy number values were converted to weight units (g) for consistency.
Diagnostic properties of PCR-based techniques.
| PCR-Based Approaches | Sensitivity | Specificity | TAT | Quantification | Cost | Sample Source | Multiplexing | Easy Optimization | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 100 pg/µL | High | ~8–48 h | No | NI | Culture, clinical samples | Yes | NI | [ |
| Conventional PCR | High A | High B | ~3–8 h C | No | 0.75–1 Euros D | Culture, nail samples, positive blood culture bottles, simulated blood samples, clinical samples | Yes | Yes | [ |
| Nested-PCR | 0.1–150 fg | High D | ~6–24 h | No | NI | Culture, paraffin wax embedded tissues, and blood sample | Yes | NI | [ |
| Real-time PCR | 10 fg E | High F | 1–2 h | Yes | NI G | Culture, clinical samples, formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded specimens, environmental | Yes | Can be complicated if primer optimization and melt curves are performed as well as using absolute values for calibration due to the need for standard curve generation | [ |
TAT, turn-around time; pg, picogram; fg, femtogram; ag, atomgram; NI, Not-indicated. A,B, Sensitivity and specificity was high except for minor cases. C Timing was not clearly stated in some studies, hence TAT was calculated based on the approximate DNA extraction and PCR stages. Except for [120] that found the specificity of 2.15 ± 0.25 CFU/mL, the rest of culture-dependent assays sensitivity considered when all the target species were correctly identified and specificity was defined when the assay did not cross-react with non-target species. D, price ranges were only mentioned in reference 114 and 115. E Sensitivity can be affected by multiple factors including platform, chemistry, and perhaps most importantly, extraction method. F Specificity of real-time PCR can be greatly affected depending on whether just a dye is used to detect non-specific amplification (SYBR Green) or a specific probe is used. G Cost can be greatly affected by detection method. A probe is much more expensive than dyes and a commercial master mix is more expensive than mixing individual components separately.