| Literature DB >> 34947028 |
Malgorzata Mikulska1,2, Elisa Balletto2, Elio Castagnola3, Alessandra Mularoni4.
Abstract
(1-3)-beta-D-glucan (BDG) is an almost panfungal marker (absent in zygomycetes and most cryptococci), which can be successfully used in screening and diagnostic testing in patients with haematological malignancies if its advantages and limitations are known. The aim of this review is to report the data, particularly from the last 5 years, on the use of BDG in haematological population. Published data report mainly on the performance of the Fungitell™ assay, although several others are currently available, and they vary in method and cut-off of positivity. The sensitivity of BDG for invasive fungal disease (IFD) in haematology patients seems lower than in other populations, possibly because of the type of IFD (lower sensitivity was found in case of aspergillosis compared to candidiasis and pneumocystosis) or the use of prophylaxis. The specificity of the test can be improved by using two consecutive positive assays and avoiding testing in the case of the concomitant presence of factors associated with false positive results. BDG should be used in combination with clinical assessment and other diagnostic tests, both radiological and mycological, to provide maximum information. Good performance of BDG in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has been reported. BDG is a useful diagnostic method in haematology patients, particularly for pneumocystosis or initial diagnosis of invasive fungal infections.Entities:
Keywords: aspergillosis; cerebral infection; glucan; invasive fungal infections; neutropenia; pneumocystosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34947028 PMCID: PMC8706797 DOI: 10.3390/jof7121046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Comparison of characteristics of different beta-D-glucan test assays.
| Test Assay | Availability | Producer | Method | Cut-Off Value | Overall Sensitivity | Overall Specificity | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fungitell | Europe, US | Associates of Cape Cod, Falmouth, MA, USA | Colorimetric | Intermediate 60–79 pg/mL | 27–100% | 0–100% | BDG detection by Fungitell is part of EORTC/MSG criteria (positive serum BDG in combination with host factor and clinical criterion) for probable invasive candidiasis or PJP. | [ |
| Fungitell STAT | Europe, US | Associates of Cape Cod, Falmouth, MA, USA | Indeterminate 0.75–1.1 | ND | ND | New rapid test that can be run on one or more patient specimens (single sample testing), but initial clinical validation reported 98–99% concordance with indeterminate results excluded and 74–91% if included. | [ | |
| Glucatell | Europe, US | Associates of Cape Cod, Falmouth, MA, USA | Colorimetric | 80 pg/mL | 50–92% | 41–94% | The Glucatell test differs from the Fungitell test in that the Glucatell reagent is processed to eliminate Factor C. This makes the Glucatell test more specific for BDG linkages. The Glucatell reagent does not react to other polysaccharides, including beta-glucans with other glycosidic linkages. | [ |
| Wako | Asia, Europe | Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Osaka, Japan | Turbidimetric method | 11 pg/mL | 50–86% | 89–100% | [ | |
| Fungitec G test ES | Europe, US | Seikagaku Kogyo Corporation, Tokyo, Japan Subsidiary Associates of Cape Cod, Falmouth, MA, USA | Colorimetric method | 20 pg/mL | 67–88% | 60–85% | [ | |
| Dynamiker Fungus | Some European countries and North Africa | Dynamiker Biotechnology Ltd., Tianjin, China | Turbidimetric method | 95 pg/mL | 64–81% | 78–80% | [ |
ND, no data.
Potential causes of false positive and false negative results of serum BDG; underlined cases are considered as clinically important and potentially frequent [2,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27].
| FALSE POSITIVES | Mechanism | Comments |
|---|---|---|
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| Haemodialysis | Use of regenerated cellulose dialysis membrane | Modern dialysis membranes (non-BDG-leaching synthetic membranes) no longer release BDG, and BDG was highly specific for the diagnosis of IFD in the serum of patients receiving haemodialysis in a recent study [ |
| Blood and blood derivates such as | Cellulosic depth filters are generally mixtures of cellulose and diatomaceous earth and are used to provide initial clarification of blood plasma. Process solutions may also contain BDG and introduce contamination. | The risk of false positivity after receiving blood or blood components seems dependent on the product’s concentrations of BDG and is not constant (for example, never observed in our hospital), while immunoglobulin preparations almost invariably contain BDG [ |
| Cellulose containing gauzes/surgical sponges | The release of BDG from surgery gauzes is temporary and depends on the type of gauze used [ | |
| Non-glucan-free laboratory equipment | Currently unlikely, since glucan-free laboratory equipment is available. | |
| Beta-lactam antibiotics (e.g., ampicillin-sulbactam, amoxicillin-clavulanate) | BDG may be present in the original source material itself, such as products made by fungal fermentation, in excipients added to the formulation, from media used in microbial or cell culture, or from process equipment, materials, and solutions. | Possible; however, the high level of dilution generated upon injection of relatively low volumes of antibiotic make this unlikely. Further, the high negative predictive value for IFD observed for patients receiving a vast array of antibiotics suggests that this is not a significant problem [ |
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| Bacteriemia | Translocation as a consequence of ischemic damage to the intestinal barrier due to septic shock | Some experiences suggest that bacteraemia is a very rare source of false positivity [ |
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| Possible translocation of fungal antigens through the intestinal mucosa damaged by chemotherapy | Whether or not this might truly affect specificity of BDG in adult hematologic patients remains controversial, but should be considered in patients with intestinal GvHD or severe mucositis [ |
| Major abdominal surgery | Translocation as a consequence of loss of integrity of the intestinal wall | Rare in haematology. |
| Gut ischemia | Translocation as a consequence of ischemic damage | |
| Burns | Large surface area burns | Validation of alternative cut-offs in specific clinical contexts known to contribute to elevated BDG titre may provide the solution to specificity issues [ |
| Chronic kidney disease | Uremia’s metabolic toxicity | |
| Protease-producing intestinal enterococci | ||
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| End-stage liver disease | Reduced clearance | |
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| Although rare, needs to be considered in differential diagnosis in case of compatible clinical presentation (pulmonary, cerebral) [ | ||
| Producing a BDG with a (1→3)-β-backbone [ | ||
| Producing (1→2)-β-linked glucan sequences [ | ||
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| Pegylated asparaginase | Drug-related alterations in heme metabolism, which in turn interfere with measurement of BDG in serum [ | |
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| Interference with test procedure. | Possible interference, particularly for colorimetric assays [ |
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| Low pre-test probability of IFI | Lower median BDG values were reported in breakthrough IFI episodes [ |
| Sanctuary sites or poorly vascularized sites of infection | BDG not released into blood | |
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| Lower content of BDG component in fungal wall | Lower levels of BDG reported [ |
| Hyperbilirubinemia | Interference with test procedure | Possible interference, particularly for colorimetric assays [ |
Figure 1Practical approach to the use of a positive BDG result in patients with HM (BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; CAGTA, Candida albicans germ-tube antibody IgG assay; CT, computed tomography; Mn/A-Mn, mannan antigen and anti-mannan antibodies; PCR, polymerase chain reaction).
The performance of BDG assays in recent studies on pneumocystosis in patients with haematological malignancies (HM).
| Study | Patients | Comparison | Cut-Off, pg/mL | Sensitivity % | Specificity % | PPV (95% CI) | NPV (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Engsbro et al., 2019 [ | N = 45, HIV, SOT, HSCT, HM, solid cancer | BDG compared to immunofluorescence microscopy | |||||
| All patients | 60 | 89 (52–100) | 48 (23–72) | ||||
| 80 | 89 (52–100) | 65 (38–86) | |||||
| PCR-positive patients | 60 | 100 (16–100) | 71 (29–96) | ||||
| 80 | 100 (16–100) | 74 (54–89) | |||||
| BDG compared to clinical categorization | |||||||
| All patients | 60 | 89 (65–99) | 64 (42–81) | ||||
| 80 | 83 (59–96) | 74 (54–89) | |||||
| PCR-positive patients | 60 | 87 (59–98) | 100 (16–100) | ||||
| 80 | 80 (52–96) | 100 (16–100) | |||||
| Morjaria et al., 2019 [ | N = 53 HM, HSCT, solid cancer | BDG performance vs. PCR in PCR-positive cases | |||||
| Definite/Probable PJP | 80 | 87% | 84.6% | 94.6 | 68.8 | ||
| Definite/Probable PJP | 200 | 70% | 100% | 100 | 52 | ||
| Szvalb et al., 2020 [ | N = 101 HM, Solid cancer | BDG performance in PCR-positive cases | |||||
| 80 | 53.5 (43.8–62.9) | 78.4 (67.7–86.2) | 7.8 (4.4–11.2) | 98.0 (97.6–98.5) | |||
| 200 | 41.6 (32.5–51.3) | 87.8 (78.5–93.5) | 10.4 (4.3–16.5) | 97.8 (97.4–98.2) | |||
| 400 | 35.6 (27.0–45.4) | 93.2 (85.1–97.1) | 15.2 (3.8–26.5) | 97.7 (97.3–98.1) | |||
| Damiani et al., 2021 [ | N = 39 Systemic autoimmune or inflammatory disorder, SOT, HM, solid cancer | Proven PJP, defined as a positive microscopic detection of | |||||
| All patients | 80 | 87 (73–94) | 97 (87–99) | 97 (85–99) | 88 (75–95) | ||
| Only HM population | 80 | 64 (35–85) | 100 (74–100) | 100 (64–100) | 73 (48–89) | ||
BDG, serum (1,3)-beta-D glucan; CI, Confidence Interval; HIV, Human Immunodeficiency Virus; SOT, Solid Organ Transplant; HSCT, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, HM, Hematologic Malignancy.
Strengths and limitations of BDG testing in patients with haematological malignancies (HM).
| Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|
| Almost panfungal assay [ | Not applicable to Mucorales, Blastomyces, and most cryptococci [ |
| Rapid turnaround time (approx. 1 h) [ | Batch testing required with most assays [ |
| Several assays available, including a single sample format [ | Not specific for any fungus and thus needs to be used in combination with other diagnostic methods for identification of species (GM, PCR, radiology, etc.) [ |
| Used both for screening and targeted testing [ | Cut-off provided by manufacturers might need optimizing for better performance [ |
| In haematological patients, high specificity of two consecutive positive tests [ | The need to use glucan-free laboratory materials [ |
| More sensitive than blood cultures for deep-seated candidiasis [ | Possibility of false positive results (see |
| High sensitivity for PJP [ | Lower sensitivity in patients with haematologic malignancies and IFD compared to other patient groups [ |
| The only non-invasive test to support the diagnosis of PJP, especially in situations where critical illness precludes invasive diagnostic procedures such as BAL [ | Of limited use in paediatric population [ |
| Possibility of use in other sterile fluids such as cerebrospinal fluid for fungal central nervous system infections [ | In case of invasive candidiasis, lower sensitivity in case of certain species, such as |
| Not applicable for use in BAL due to high rate of false positive results [ | |
| Unpredictable rate of decline, unsuitable for rapid evaluation of treatment response [ |