Whether in vitro antifungal susceptibility findings correlate with the outcome of patients with invasive aspergillosis (IA) remains debated. This study aimed to test whether IA patients' outcomes were associated with in vitro susceptibility results. To do so, we determined the in vitro susceptibility to amphotericin B (AMB) of 37 Aspergillus flavus isolates from 14 patients with haematological malignancies diagnosed with proven or probable IA, of which 13 were treated with AMB deoxycholate. Minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) were determined by Etest with the isolates classified as in vitro sensitive (AMB-S) or resistant (AMB-R) if their MICs were < 2 or ≥ 2 mg/l, respectively. The association of the patients' death with primary disease, administered antifungal treatment, and infection with AMB-R A. flavus was tested using generalized estimating equations logistic regression. We assessed AMB-R in 31/37 (84%) isolates. In the patients treated with AMB, the survival rate was 2/3 (67%) and 2/9 (22%) for those infected with AMB-S or AMB-R A. flavus, respectively. Both infection with AMB-R A. flavus (P = 0.014) strain and acute myelocytic leukaemia as the underlying primary disease (P = 0.036) were independent predictors of death. Our findings indicate that in vitro resistance predicts a poor outcome in patients with A. flavus invasive disease treated with AMB. Recent advances in non-culture-based microbiological methods should not discourage efforts to obtain in vitro antifungal susceptibility results, which are critical for the choice of antifungal therapy in patients with IA.
Our results, concerning North-African SLE patients, confirm the findings of previous studies which suggest that thrombocytopenia correlates with more severe disease and has a negative impact on the survival of lupus patients.
This study aimed at comparing a real-time PCR assay and a PCR-ELISA assay of both serum and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples for the diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis (IA) in patients with hematological malignancies. Using a nested case-control design, 163 patients at risk were prospectively monitored and PCR assays were performed on frozen aliquots of 459 sera which were prospectively sampled twice weekly and 42 BAL specimens sampled from 43 probable and one proven IA cases and 47 matched controls. The data from three patients classified as possible IA were excluded from the nested case-control study. The sensitivity of real-time PCR and PCR-ELISA assays in serum was 73% and 86%, respectively and specificity was 100% for both. In BAL, sensitivity was 64% for real-time PCR, 71% for PCR-ELISA and 86% for Galactomannan antigen (GMA) assays with specificities of 96%, 96%, and 93%, respectively. While slightly less sensitive, the real time-PCR assay was highly specific and considerably faster and more workable than PCR-ELISA. Combining real-time PCR and GMA detection for both serum and BAL samples enhances routine laboratory IA diagnosis.
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