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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2002, p. 1811-1813, Vol. 40, No. 5
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.5.1811-1813.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Departamento Patología Animal I, Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 28040 Madrid,1 Servicio do Microbiologia Clinica y Enfermedades Infecciosas, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, 28007 Madrid, Spain2
Received 23 October 2000/ Returned for modification 14 December 2000/ Accepted 10 January 2002
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1. Of the 18 strains obtained from colonized patients, only 4 (22.2%) had an EAI
1, whereas neither of the strains isolated from patients with fungus ball reached this value. Overall, 44 out of the 142 strains obtained from the environment had an EAI
1 (30.9%). |
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In this study, we evaluated the in vitro elastase activity of A. fumigatus strains obtained from clinical and environmental samples and the utility of this characteristic for predicting invasiveness with clinical isolates.
We used 198 strains of A. fumigatus from different sources: 32 from transplant patients with IA, 6 from patients with pulmonary aspergilloma, 18 from different colonized patients, and 142 from environmental samples.
To classify a patient as having invasive disease, fungus ball, or simple colonization by Aspergillus spp., we followed diagnostic criteria and considerations according to a well-recognized medical reference (4). The identification of an isolate of A. fumigatus was made according to standard criteria (17). Environmental samples were obtained from the air outside and inside the hospital.
Elastase activity was studied in a solid medium described by Kothary et al. (12), containing the following: 0.05% elastin (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), 0.05% yeast carbon base (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich.), 0.01% rose bengal (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), and 1.5% agar (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) in 0.05 M borate buffer, pH 7.6.
Plates were inoculated in a central spot with a loopful of Aspergillus spore suspension (106/ml) and were incubated for 15 days at 37°C. We measured the diameter of colony growth and the diameter of the halo of elastin lysis (elastase activity) on days 7, 10, and 15 of incubation. We calculated an elastase activity index (EAI) by dividing the elastase diameter by the growth diameter.
To avoid bias, elastase activity was determined without knowing the clinical significance or environmental origin of every isolate. We expressed the EAI as the mean and standard deviation and used the Wilcoxon test for unpaired data to compare it among groups because EAI was not normally distributed.
We determined the sensitivity and specificity of the EAI to predict the IA for every cutoff point. To do this, we calculated the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve representing every possible cutoff point of the equation with its sensitivity and the complement of its specificity. The nearer the area below the ROC curve is to unity, the better is the validation, or fit, of the model. For areas near 0.5 the validity is poor or nil (16).
Fifty-four of the 198 strains did not grow on elastin medium and consequently did not show elastase activity; two of these strains were isolated from patients with aspergilloma, six from colonizing processes, and 46 from the environment. None of the strains without elastase activity corresponded to a patient with IA.
When comparing EAIs on days 7, 10, and 15 of incubation, the optimum reading conditions were obtained on day 10, and these indexes will be the ones referred to from now on. Figure 1 shows the differential growth characteristics of the different groups of strains with regard to their elastase activity. In all three situations the growth temperature was 37°C and the period of incubation was 10 days.
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FIG. 1. (A) Strain producing invasive aspergillosis, with a wide halo of elastase activity. (B) Colonizing strain isolated from an individual with a bacterial respiratory process, in which strain growth is ahead of elastin degradation. (C) Environmental strain which can grow in the medium, albeit slowly and without elastase activity. The nondegraded elastin granules can clearly be seen up to the colony margins. GD, growth diameter; ED, elastase activity diameter.
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1 (range, 0.88 to 1.66). Of the 18 strains obtained from colonized patients, only 4 (22.2%) had an EAI
1, while neither strain isolated from patients with fungus ball reached this value. Overall, 44 out of the 142 strains obtained from the environment had an EAI
1 (30.9%). |
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TABLE 1. EAI in A. fumigatus strains isolated from different sources
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FIG. 2. Box plot comparing the EAI between patients with and without invasive aspergillosis.
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FIG. 3. ROC curve showing the best cutoff point for EAI to detect invasive aspergillosis.
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Our study is the first to demonstrate a clear link between elastase activity and pathogenicity. Higher EAIs are related to invasive aspergillosis, whereas if the EAI is <1 the probability of suffering from invasive disease is very low. If we assume a prevalence of between 5 and 10%, the positive predictive value of the test (i.e., the probability that a positive result actually reflects an IA) would be 23.4 to 39.2%. However, in the same situation the negative predictive value (i.e., the probability that a negative corresponds to a true negative) would be 99.8 to 99.6%. In this case, the EAI is very useful to rule out suspected cases. On the other hand, when the prior probability of pulmonary IA is high (i.e., bone marrow transplant patient with new pulmonary nodular infiltrates that are not responding to broad-spectrum antibiotics), the test could be useful in helping clinicians to become aware of the potential pathogenicity of any given isolate of Aspergillus spp.
The significance of the EAI in environmental samples is still unknown. If there is an epidemiological link between strains with higher EAI in the hospital air and cases of pulmonary invasive aspergillosis, it has yet to be determined. However, if hospital isolates tend to have a higher EAI than outdoor environmental isolates, that might help to explain the reason that invasive aspergillosis is such a nosocomial problem.
Results presented in this study confirm those reported by others (8, 11), that the determination of elastase activity in clinical and environmental isolates of Aspergillus spp. may lead to the development of faster laboratory procedures for diagnosing IA and helping clinicians make faster and more informed decisions as to the welfare of their immunocompetent patients.
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