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Performance of serum (1,3)‐ß‐d‐glucan screening for the diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis in neutropenic patients with haematological malignancies

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We report our experience with the use of (1,3)‐ß‐d‐glucan (BDG) screening for the diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis (IA) in neutropenic patients with haematological malignancies. The performance of BDG screening was… Click to show full abstract

We report our experience with the use of (1,3)‐ß‐d‐glucan (BDG) screening for the diagnosis of invasive aspergillosis (IA) in neutropenic patients with haematological malignancies. The performance of BDG screening was assessed retrospectively in per patient and per sample analyses. Overall, 20 among 167 patients developed IA (12%). In the per patient analysis, BDG showed 60% sensitivity and 78% specificity when the criterion for positivity was the presence of at least one BDG value ≥80 pg/mL. For 2 consecutive positive results, sensitivity decreased to 40%, while specificity increased to 93% and was similar to that of a positive galactomannan (GM; 90%). The highest specificity (97%) was observed for combined positivity of at least one BDG and at least one GM. In the per sample analysis, the specificity of BDG was 100% in the best scenario, 96% in the median scenario and 89% in the worst scenario. BDG became positive before GM in 33% of IA patients with both markers positive (n = 12). Despite good specificity for 2 consecutive positive results, the BDG test offered unsatisfactory performance for the diagnosis of IA due to low sensitivity. The combination of BDG and GM showed the potential for increasing specificity.

Keywords: specificity; performance; screening diagnosis; bdg; diagnosis invasive

Journal Title: Mycoses
Year Published: 2018

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