Arvanitis Marios, Ziakas Panayiotis D, Zacharioudakis Ioannis M, Zervou Fainareti N, Caliendo Angela M, Mylonakis Eleftherios
Infectious Diseases Division, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island, USA Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Infectious Diseases Division, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island, USA Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA
J Clin Microbiol. 2014 Oct;52(10):3731-42. doi: 10.1128/JCM.01365-14. Epub 2014 Aug 13.
Invasive aspergillosis is a difficult-to-diagnose infection with a high mortality rate that affects high-risk groups such as patients with neutropenia and hematologic malignancies. We performed a bivariate meta-analysis of diagnostic data for an Aspergillus sp. PCR assay with blood specimens from high-risk hematology patients. We included all studies involving human subjects that assessed the performance of any PCR assay for invasive aspergillosis in whole blood or serum and that used the European Organization for the treatment of Cancer/Mycoses Study Group criteria as a reference standard. Three investigators independently searched the literature for eligible studies and extracted the data. Out of a total of 37 studies, 25 met strict quality criteria and were included in our evidence synthesis. Twenty-five studies with 2,595 patients were analyzed. The pooled diagnostic performance of whole-blood and serum PCR assays was moderate, with a sensitivity and specificity of 84% (95% confidence interval [CI], 75 to 91%) and 76% (95% CI, 65 to 84%), respectively, suggesting that a positive or negative result is unable, on its own, to confirm or exclude a suspected infection. The performance of a PCR assay of serum was not significantly different from that of whole blood. Notably, at least two positive PCR test results were found to have a specificity of 95% and a sensitivity of 64% for invasive infection, achieving a high positive likelihood ratio of 12.8. Importantly, the European Aspergillus PCR Initiative (EAPCRI) recommendations improved the performance of the PCR even further when at least two positive specimens were used to define PCR positivity. In conclusion, two positive PCR results should be considered highly indicative of an active Aspergillus sp. infection. Use of the EAPCRI recommendations by clinical laboratories can further enhance PCR performance.
侵袭性曲霉病是一种难以诊断的感染性疾病,死亡率很高,主要影响高危人群,如中性粒细胞减少症患者和血液系统恶性肿瘤患者。我们对高危血液病患者血液标本的曲霉属PCR检测诊断数据进行了双变量荟萃分析。我们纳入了所有涉及人类受试者的研究,这些研究评估了全血或血清中任何PCR检测对侵袭性曲霉病的检测性能,并以欧洲癌症治疗组织/真菌病研究组标准作为参考标准。三名研究人员独立检索文献以寻找符合条件的研究并提取数据。在总共37项研究中,25项符合严格的质量标准并纳入我们的证据综合分析。对25项研究中的2595名患者进行了分析。全血和血清PCR检测的综合诊断性能中等,敏感性和特异性分别为84%(95%置信区间[CI],75%至91%)和76%(95%CI,65%至84%),这表明阳性或阴性结果本身无法确诊或排除疑似感染。血清PCR检测的性能与全血检测的性能没有显著差异。值得注意的是,至少两次PCR检测阳性结果对侵袭性感染的特异性为95%,敏感性为64%,阳性似然比高达12.8。重要的是,当使用至少两份阳性标本定义PCR阳性时,欧洲曲霉PCR倡议(EAPCRI)的建议进一步提高了PCR的性能。总之,两次PCR阳性结果应被视为高度提示存在活跃的曲霉属感染。临床实验室采用EAPCRI的建议可进一步提高PCR的性能。