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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2005, p. 2929-2931, Vol. 43, No. 6
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.6.2929-2931.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratoire de Parasitologie Mycologie, CHU, Hôpital du Bocage, and Laboratoire de Microbiologie Médicale et Moléculaire, Faculté de Médecine, Dijon, France,1 Service des Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales, CHU, Hôpital d'enfants, and Laboratoire de Microbiologie Médicale et Moléculaire, Faculté de Médecine, Dijon, France,2 Service d'Hématologie Clinique, CHU, Hôpital d'enfants, Dijon, France,3 Centre National de Référence de la Mycologie et des Antifongiques, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France4
Received 10 November 2004/ Returned for modification 7 December 2004/ Accepted 25 January 2005
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The patient, a 43-year-old man, was admitted with weight loss, fever (39°C), dyspnea, cough, and hemoptysis. Human immunodeficiency virus-specific antibodies were detected with both the ELISA and Western blot assays. Other laboratory findings included a CD4 cell count of 6/mm3 and a human immunodeficiency virus viral load of 6.07 log RNA/ml. Chest roentgenogram and computed tomographic scan showed infiltration of the lower left lobe and multiple nodules within both lungs. Bronchoscopic examination revealed an obstructive hemorrhagic lesion of the lower left lobar bronchus. A biopsy was performed, and epinephrine lavages were repeated to stop hemoptysis. Because of unexplained fever and lung infiltrate, amoxicillin-clavulanate was administered. Fluconazole (200 mg/day) was also started because of oral candidiasis. Clinical status did not improve. On day 6, a blood culture (Bactec 9240; Becton Dickinson) was positive and showed capsulated yeasts identified as C. neoformans (API 32C; Biomérieux, France). The cryptococcal antigen titer in serum samples collected on days 7 and 8 was 1:20 (Calas; Meridian Bioscience). The Platelia Aspergillus reactivity indexes for serum samples collected on days 5, 8, and 9 were 4, 0.5, and 2.2, respectively (Bio-Rad, Marnes-La-Coquette, France). Cryptococcal antigen detection, direct microscopic examination, and culture of the CSF were negative. Cultures of sputum grew C. neoformans. Histopathological examination of pulmonary biopsy revealed chorionic invasion with Gomori-Grocott-positive capsulated yeasts consistent with C. neoformans, but no hyphae were observed. None of the respiratory, CSF, and blood cultures grew Aspergillus spp. Intravenous fluconazole (800 mg/day) and amphotericin B deoxycholate (1 mg/kg of body weight/day) were started on day 6. Blood cultures remained negative thereafter. The patient died 14 days later with septic shock and acute respiratory distress of unexplained cause.
We found no satisfactory explanation for the positive Platelia Aspergillus assay result for this patient. Although Aspergillus-PCR was not performed on the pulmonary biopsy, the absence of filaments at histopathological examination and the negativity of Aspergillus cultures made coinfection by C. neoformans and Aspergillus spp. very unlikely. The patient had no clinical signs suggestive of an extrapulmonary aspergillosis. However, we cannot formally exclude the possibility of a cryptic locus of infection. The patient received amoxicillin-clavulanate, a treatment that was recently suggested to cause false positivity of the Platelia Aspergillus assay (11). However, this information was not available at the time our patient was treated. Besides, this possibility does not change the overall conclusion of the experimental protocol below.
We thus hypothesized that the Platelia Aspergillus assay positivity may have been due to cross-reactive antigens released by C. neoformans. To test this possibility, soluble antigens from a panel of clinical and reference strains of Cryptococcus spp. (Table 1) were tested for their reactivity in the Platelia Aspergillus assay. Cultures were plated on malt agar and incubated at 30°C for 5 days. For each strain, 5 to 10 yeast colonies were suspended in 1 ml distilled water. After vigorous agitation for 1 min, the suspensions were centrifuged for 5 min at 10,000 x g, and the supernatants were collected for antigen detection. Two batches were prepared from independent cultures of each strain. Cryptococcal antigen detection was performed with the cryptococcal antigen latex agglutination system according to the instructions of the manufacturer, without pronase pretreatment. Aspergillus galactomannan detection was performed with the Platelia Aspergillus test, a sandwich immunoenzymatic assay based on a monoclonal antibody that binds Aspergillus galactomannan (Fig. 1 [adapted from reference 9]). The first batch of culture supernatants was tested without prior heating (Table 1) (experiment 1). The second batch of supernatants was tested with or without prior heating at 100°C (Table 1) (experiments 2 and 3). Heating is recommended by the manufacturer to precipitate proteins that may interfere with the immunoenzymatic reaction. Each series contained several controls: distilled water and a negative serum sample as negative controls, a positive-control serum sample, and a standard serum sample containing galactomannan at 1 ng/ml provided by the manufacturer. For each sample, the index is the ratio of the optical density of the sample to the optical density of the standard serum. In clinical practice, an index value of
1.5 is indicative of a positive reaction, an index of >1 and <1.5 is intermediate, and an index of <1 is considered nonsignificant. However, it was recently suggested that a cutoff value at 0.5 was clinically relevant (10).
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TABLE 1. Index of reactivity of heat-treated and not treated soluble antigens from suspensions of clinical and reference strains of Cryptococcus spp. in the Platelia Aspergillus assaya
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FIG. 1. Proposed structures of the Aspergillus fumigatus galactomannan (adapted from references 8 and 9 with permission) and the Cryptococcus neoformans galactoxylomannan (adapted from reference 1 with permission). The repeating unit of the galactomannan secreted by Aspergillus fumigatus consists of a linear core of mannan residues with -1,2- and -1,6-linked residues. Antigenic side chains composed exclusively of ß-1,5 galactofuranosyl units are linked to the C-6 and C-3 positions of the -1,2-linked mannose units of the core. These side chains have an average degree of polymerization of 4 and are the target of the antigalactomannan monoclonal antibody employed in the Platelia Aspergillus test. The repeating unit of the Cryptococcus neoformans galactoxylomannan consists of a backbone of -1,6-linked galactose units, with side chains composed of galactose, mannose, xylose, and O-acetyl residues branched on alternate galactose residues. Small quantities of galactofuranose are present in the GalXM in some, but not all, C. neoformans isolates (6). The linkage of these galactofuranose units has not been characterized (14). M, mannan; G, galactose; Gf, galactofuranose; X, xylose.
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To identify which of the C. neoformans antigens was reactive in the Aspergillus galactomannan ELISA, purified components from the capsule (GXM serotype A and serotype D and GalXM, a gift from R. Cherniak, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA) were used (2, 6). The carbohydrates were diluted in sterile distilled water prior to utilization. Solutions at 10 µg/ml of each purified carbohydrate reacted in the cryptococcal antigen detection test. Table 2 shows that GalXM was the capsular component reactive in the Aspergillus galactomannan assay. This reactivity was dose dependent and specific since GXM showed no reactivity. These observations are consistent with the reactivity of Cap67 (Table 1), a mutant strain of C. neoformans that lacks GXM (1). The GalXM of C. neoformans consists of a backbone of galactose units, with side chains composed of galactose, mannose, xylose, and O-acetyl residues branched on alternate galactose residues (Fig. 1 [adapted from reference 1]). GalXMs from different C. neoformans serotypes differ in anomeric linkages between sugar residues (3). Despite these variations, the GalXM epitope recognized by the Aspergillus galactomannan monoclonal antibody is apparently conserved in all C. neoformans serotypes and strains (Table 1).
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TABLE 2. Index of reactivity of heat-treated and not treated purified components of the C. neoformans capsule in the Platelia Aspergillus assaya
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