| Literature DB >> 35887420 |
Jeanne Bigot1, Sandra Vellaissamy2, Yaye Senghor2, Christophe Hennequin1, Juliette Guitard1.
Abstract
According to the immunodepression status, the diagnosis of Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PjP) may be difficult. Molecular methods appear very sensitive, but they lack specificity because Pj DNA can be detected in Pneumocystis-colonized patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the value of a serum ß-d-Glucan (BDG) assay for the diagnosis of PjP in a large cohort of HIV-negative and HIV-positive patients, either as a first-line diagnostic test for PjP or as a tool to distinguish between colonization and PjP in cases of low fungal load. Data of Pj qPCR performed on bronchopulmonary specimens over a 3-year period were retrieved retrospectively. For each result, we searched for a BDG serum assay performed within ±5 days. Among the 69 episodes that occurred in HIV-positive patients and the 609 episodes that occurred in immunocompromised HIV-negative patients, we find an equivalent sensitivity of BDG assays compared with molecular methods to diagnose probable/proven PjP, in a first-line strategy. Furthermore, BDG assay can be used confidently to distinguish between infected and colonized patients using a 80 pg/mL cut-off. Finally, it is necessary to search for causes of false positivity to increase BDG assay performance. BDG assay represents a valuable adjunctive tool to distinguish between colonization and infection.Entities:
Keywords: BDG; HIV patients; molecular diagnostic; non-HIV immunocompromised patients; pneumocystis colonization; pneumocystis pneumonia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887420 PMCID: PMC9318034 DOI: 10.3390/jof8070663
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fungi (Basel) ISSN: 2309-608X
Figure 1Characteristics and classification of patients/episodes included in the study.
Performances of BDG assay and molecular diagnosis for the diagnosis of PjP in 69 episodes from 67 HIV-positive patients as a screening strategy.
| qPCR | Cut-Off (cp/mL) | Sensitivity | Specificity | PPV (95% CI) | NPV (95% CI) | LR |
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| 3000 | 92.3% (75.9–98.6%) | 93% (81.4–07.6%) | 88.9% (71.9–96.1%) | 95.2% (84.2–99.1%) | 13.2 | |
| 30,000 | 92.3% (75.9–98.6%) | 97.7% (87.97–99.9%) | 96% (80.5–99.8%) | 95.5% (84.9–99.2%) | 39.7 | |
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| 80 | 96.1% (81.1–99.8%) | 81.4% (67.4–90.3%) | 75.8% (59–87.2%) | 97.2% (85.8–99.9%) | 5.2/12.2 | |
| 200 | 88.5% (71–96%) | 88.4% (75.5–94.9%) | 82.1% (64.4–92.1%) | 92.7% (80.6–97.5%) | 7.6/34.5 | |
| 400 | 84.6% (66.5–93.8%) | 95.3% (84.5–99.2%) | 91.7% (74.1–98.5%) | 91.1% (79.3–96.5%) | 18.2/– |
CI: confidence interval, PPV: positive predictive value, NPV: negative predictive value, LR: likelihood ratio, BDG: BD glucan, BPO: bronchopulmonary. * Excluding evident causes of BDG false-positive.
Figure 2BDG value in 69 episodes from 67 HIV-positive patients suspected of PjP according to the final diagnosis retained. BDG values (a) with and (b) without evident cases of BDG false positive results. Comparison of the four groups was done using Kruskal-Wallis tests followed by Dunn’s pair-wise comparisons; p-adjusted values are indicated. Red line: median BDG value. ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001, **** p < 0.0001.
Performances of BDG assay and molecular diagnosis as a screening strategy for the diagnosis of PjP in 609 episodes occurring in 575 HIV-negative patients.
| qPCR | Cut-Off (cp/mL) | Sensitivity | Specificity (95% CI) | PPV (95% CI) | NPV (95% CI) | LR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3000 | 86.1 (71.3–93.9%) | 97.4% (95.7–98.4%) | 67.4% (53–79.1%) | 99.1% (97.9–99.6%) | 32.9 | |
| 30,000 | 63.9% (47.6–77.5%) | 99.7% (98.7–99.9%) | 92% (75–98.6%) | 97.8% (96.2–98.7%) | 183 | |
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| 80 | 88.9% (74.7–95.6%) | 82.6% (79.2–85.4%) | 24.2% (17.7–32.2%) | 99.2% (97.9–99.7%) | 5.1/24.2 | |
| 200 | 72.2% (56–84.1%) | 91.3% (79.7–96.6%) | 34.2% (24.5–45.4%) | 98.12% (96.6–99.0%) | 8.3/95.1 | |
| 400 | 63.9% (47.6–77.5%) | 94.4% (92.2–96%) | 41.8% (29.7–55%) | 97.6% (96–98.6%) | 11.4/346.3 |
CI: confidence interval, PPV: positive predictive value, NPV: negative predictive value, LR: likelihood ratio, BDG: BD glucan, BPO: bronchopulmonary. * excluding evident causes of BDG false positive.
Figure 3BDG value in 609 episodes from 575 HIV-negative patients suspected of PjP according to the final diagnosis retained. BDG values (a) with and (b) without evident cases of BDG false positive results. Comparison of the four groups was done using Kruskal-Wallis tests followed by Dunn’s pair-wise comparisons. p-adjusted values are indicated. Red line: median BDG value. **** p < 10−4.
Performance of BDG assays for PjP and Pj colonization discrimination in 56 episodes occurring in 56 HIV-negative patients with a Pj low fungal load (<30,000 cp/mL).
| Cut-Off (pg/mL) | Sensitivity | Specificity (95% CI)/Specificity * (95% CI) | PPV (95% CI)/PPV * (95% CI) | NPV (95% CI) | LR/LR * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 80 | 83.3% (55.2–97%) | 77.3% (63–87.2%) | 50% (29.9–70.1%) | 94.4% (81.9–99%) | 3.7/7.9 |
| 200 | 58.3% (31.9–80.7%) | 80.9% (78.8–96.4%) | 63.6% (35.4–84.8%) | 88.9% (76.5–95.2% | 6.4/- |
| 400 | 41.7% (19.3–68%) | 95.4% (84.9–99.2%) | 71.4% (35.9–94.9%) | 85.7% (73.3–92.9%) | 9.2/- |
CI: confidence interval, PPV: positive predictive value, NPV: negative predictive value, LR: likelihood ratio, BDG: BD glucan. * excluding evident causes of BDG false positive.