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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, December 2003, p. 5683-5688, Vol. 41, No. 12
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.12.5683-5688.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Program in Infectious Diseases, Clinical Research Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,1 Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington2
Received 30 June 2003/ Returned for modification 20 August 2003/ Accepted 16 September 2003
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Kurtz et al. were the first to propose the term minimal effective concentration (MEC) to denote the lowest echinocandin concentration at which the fungi display microscopic morphological changes (11), and this measure is currently used by investigators to report CAS susceptibilities (1, 17, 18). However, determining MEC by microscopy is labor-intensive and subjective and requires expertise. Other modified versions of CAS susceptibility assays have included E-test and disk diffusion (3, 4, 8), but defining precise MICs by E-test does not appear to be reliable (3, 4).
We hypothesized that drug-induced alterations in filamentous growth may be measured by visual inspection of morphology on solid media and developed an agar dilution method to measure Aspergillus susceptibility to CAS. Because none of the existing testing methods have been standardized, we also sought to develop additional methods to quantify relative fungal growth in the presence of drug. To this end, we developed an additional assay that measures growth according to secretion of a hyphal polysaccharide, galactomannan (GM). Results of multiple experimental comparisons suggest that agar dilution may be an easy, accurate method to assess Aspergillus susceptibility to echinocandin antifungal agents.
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Inoculum preparation. Isolates were stored frozen at -70°C, passaged twice on potato dextrose agar (PDA) at 35°C prior to susceptibility testing, and inocula were prepared as described in the NCCLS M38-A document (12). Briefly, cultures were grown on PDA slants at 35°C for 7 days. To prepare conidial inocula, cultures were flooded with sterile 0.85% saline containing 0.025% Tween 20 (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, Mo.) and gently probed with a pipette tip. The resulting suspension was vortexed, heavy particles were allowed to settle for 3 to 5 min, and the upper layer was adjusted to a transmittance of 80 to 82% by using a spectrophotometer (wavelength, 530 nm). The stock suspensions for Aspergillus and Rhizopus species contained mostly conidia. These nongerminated conidial inoculum suspensions were diluted 1:50 in RPMI 1640 medium (buffered to a pH of 7.0 using 0.165 M morpholinepropanesulfonic acid [MOPS] [both from Sigma Chemical Co.]) for testing by the NCCLS method (Aspergillus and Rhizopus species) and 1:100 in RPMI 1640 medium for testing by the agar dilution method. C. albicans stock inoculum was diluted 1:100 in RPMI 1640 medium for both the agar dilution and the microbroth methods.
Broth microdilution methods. CAS, provided as powder by Merck Research Laboratories (Rahway, N.J.), was diluted in RPMI 1640 medium (with L-glutamine, without bicarbonate, buffered to pH 7.0 with 0.165 M MOPS [Sigma Chemical Co.]). Doubling dilutions of the drug were prepared in microdilution wells, and 100 µl of diluted conidial inoculum suspension was added to 100 µl of drug solution, yielding final CAS concentrations ranging from 0.03125 to 32 µg/ml. Growth and sterility controls were included for each isolate. A C. albicans strain with known CAS susceptibility was tested in parallel whenever a set of isolates was evaluated. Microdilution trays were incubated at 35°C and examined after 48 h for MIC determination. MICs were interpreted as the drug concentration that demonstrated 50% growth inhibition, as described previously (1). MECs were determined microscopically as the lowest concentration of CAS causing abnormal hyphal growth with short abundant branchings (1).
Agar dilution method. CAS was serially diluted in molten medium equilibrated at 50°C (RPMI 1640 medium with 2% glucose [Sigma Chemical Co.] with 1.5% Bacto Agar) to achieve final drug concentrations ranging from 0.03 to 32 µg/ml. One milliliter was added to each well in a 24-well plate with a flat bottom (catalog no. 353847; Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, N.J.) and allowed to solidify. The center of each well was inoculated with 10 µl of the conidial suspension. Drug-free growth controls were included for each isolate. MICs for filamentous fungi were determined after 48 h at 35°C. MICs were defined as the lowest drug concentrations that had granular appearing microcolonies of growth instead of filamentous radiating colonies on solid agar (Fig. 1a). For C. albicans, the MIC was the lowest drug concentration associated with no growth on agar.
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FIG. 1. Agar dilution method. (a) Well 1 is a positive control (without CAS), and wells 2 to 12 contain drug concentrations ranging from 32 to 0.03 µg/ml (as shown). The MIC is 0.25 µg/ml, interpreted as the lowest drug concentration showing compact granular microcolonies compared to the radial filamentous colonies of the growth control and wells containing lower drug concentrations (0.125 to 0.03 µg/ml). The corresponding microscopic appearance of colonies at effective concentrations and subinhibitory concentrations of drug are shown in panels b and c, respectively.
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Agreement between different susceptibility testing methods. Each of the isolates was tested at least three times by the agar dilution and NCCLS methods (MECs and MICs). Fifteen isolates of A. fumigatus and A. niger were also tested at least twice using the antigen release method. For each strain, the percentage of agreement between the methods was defined as the proportion of MICs that fell within 1 dilution of the MIC determined by the NCCLS method, the antigen method, and the agar dilution method, respectively. For comparative evaluation of the broth microdilution and agar dilution methods, the geometric mean and range of the MICs and MECs were calculated for each genus-species combination. High and low off-scale MICs were included in the analysis by converting to the next higher or lower drug concentration, respectively.
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0.25 µg/ml) to high (
16 µg/ml). In contrast, MICs determined by serial broth microdilution tended to be higher for all A. fumigatus isolates tested. The geometric means of agar dilution MICs and MECs and broth microdilution MICs for A. fumigatus isolates were 0.4, 1.2, and 6.5 µg/ml, respectively. CAS susceptibility was high for seven A. fumigatus isolates (Af28 to Af34), using all three methods. Agar dilution MICs and MECs fell within 1 dilution in 75.5% of isolates, and 84.8% of isolates tested had results within 2 dilutions. Only four isolates had agar dilution MICs and MECs that differed by more than 4 dilutions of drug. |
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TABLE 1. Agar dilution and NCCLS broth microdilution results obtained for multiple A. fumigatus isolatesa
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TABLE 2. Agar dilution and NCCLS broth microdilution results obtained for multiple isolates of three Aspergillus speciesa
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Because of the lack of agreement between broth microdilution MICs and other methods, we compared both results with results of the GM release assay. Initial experiments demonstrated that GM secreted in culture medium increased over time in the absence of drug for all species tested; results for A. fumigatus and A. niger cultures are shown in Fig. 2a. In the presence of increased concentrations of CAS, secreted GM decreased predictably. Relative growth curves for one A. fumigatus isolate that had high MICs and MECs and two isolates with low MICs and MECs are shown in Fig. 2b.
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FIG. 2. Antigen release assay. (a) OD index of secreted GM in A. fumigatus and A. niger after 24 h of growth (means ± standard deviations [error bars] from three experiments). (b) Ratio of secreted GM relative to growth control is shown for one A. fumigatus isolate with a high MIC (Af33), one A. fumigatus isolate with a low MIC (Af27), and one A. niger isolate (An10). The drug concentration at which the ratio approximated 0.5 was interpreted as the MIC50.
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FIG. 3. Comparison of agar dilution MICs, broth microdilution MICs and MECs, and antigen secretion MICs for selected A. fumigatus isolates. The geometric means (symbols) and ranges (lines) from at least three experiments per isolate are shown.
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FIG. 4. Comparison of agar dilution MICs, broth microdilution MICs and MECs, and antigen secretion MICs for selected A. niger isolates. The geometric means (symbols) and ranges (lines) from at least three experiments per isolate are shown.
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Multiple laboratories have reported difficulties in testing and inconsistency in MIC results for CAS using traditional broth microdilution methods (2, 4) (A. M. Flattery, P. S. Hicks, A. Wilcox, and H. Rosen, Abstr. 40th Intersci. Conf. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., abstr. 936, 2000). The results of our studies are consistent with those of prior reports. In the data presented here, broth microdilution MICs were consistently higher than all other measures of fungal growth, and interpretation was associated with a great deal of interexperimental variability. While microscopic MECs were consistently lower, they too were associated with a large amount of measurement variability between experiments. It is not surprising that the results of the agar dilution assay closely reflected MECs, as colony morphology and microscopic appearance are closely linked (Fig. 1). However, the agar dilution MICs were relatively more reproducible between experiments. Susceptibility measured by broth microdilution was notably lower for all isolates. Which microdilution measure (MIC versus MEC) is the clinically relevant observation still needs to be resolved with additional studies; however, we believe that the large degree of experimental variability makes broth microdilution MICs both difficult to interpret and of questionable value.
Additional support for employing the microscopic or agar dilution method to assess relative growth was provided by the results of the antigen release assay. For all discrepant isolates tested, the antigen release MICs were more consistent with agar dilution MICs and MECs than the results generated by broth turbidity.
Although the laborious nature of the antigen release assay limits its utility as a susceptibility test, our data are in agreement with prior findings that GM release correlates with hyphal growth (Winn et al., Abstr. 6th Congr. Eur. Confed. Med. Mycol. Soc.). These in vitro results are, however, inconsistent with in vivo observations that GM antigen values increased in echinocandin-treated animals (14, 15). Specifically, prior studies showed that GM indices continued to rise despite improved clinical outcomes (survival) in CAS- and micafungin-treated rabbits (14, 15). It was proposed that this effect might be caused by drug-induced hyphal fragmentation. This apparent discrepancy in the kinetics of GM antigen values in in vitro versus animal studies may be explained by numerous laboratory and/or biological variables. For instance, it is possible that the impact of echinocandins on Aspergillus GM secretion may be dependent on the cellular state of the organism (conidia versus hyphae) at the time of drug exposure. Detailed studies will be necessary to define the kinetics of GM release using multiple models.
Although most of the Aspergillus isolates appeared very susceptible to CAS, 5 of 50 isolates examined demonstrated a relative resistance to the drug in all assays. Caspofungin-resistant mutants of Saccharomyces and Candida species have previously been generated (5, 6, 7, 10, 13, 16), and different susceptibilities of A. fumigatus isolates have only recently been observed (8). It is also noteworthy that all A. niger isolates appeared unusually susceptible in vitro; the clinical significance of these findings requires confirmation in animal models. It is possible that this species may be particularly susceptible because of a difference in cell wall composition.
In conclusion, the agar dilution method appears to be a valuable test for in vitro determination of the susceptibilities of Aspergillus isolates against echinocandins. Its simplicity and low cost may allow for application in a clinical microbiology laboratory. Future studies are necessary to determine interlaboratory reproducibility and to evaluate the clinical significance of the apparently different CAS susceptibilities of different Aspergillus isolates.
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