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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, November 2005, p. 5828-5829, Vol. 43, No. 11
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.11.5828-5829.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Role of Cryptococcal Antigen Assay in Diagnosis and Monitoring of Cryptococcal Meningitis

LETTER
In a recent paper evaluating the significance of cryptococcal
antigen test results for 29 Chinese human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV)-negative patients affected by cryptococcal meningitis,
Lu and colleagues (
8) showed in all patients a decrease of antigen
titer from the baseline following antifungal therapy and suggested
that a decrease can be used to monitor antifungal therapy efficacy
but cannot be used as an index of cure. We have reviewed our
experience with 66 HIV-positive patients out of 118 with cryptococcal
meningitis for whom at least three serial determinations (at
baseline, day 7, and day 14) of cryptococcal antigen tests on
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were available (
1). A total of 440
determinations (range, 3 to 28 antigen determinations; median,
5 antigen determinations) were available, and for 55 patients
the last determination was considered (median, 13 weeks; range,
2 to 84 weeks). In Fig.
1 is depicted the kinetics of CSF cryptococcal
antigen together with the results of CSF culture. Overall, 53
patients (80%) showed a decrease of CSF antigen titer from the
baseline (7 of whom had negative results), as follows: 27 cases
of 1 to 3 dilutions, 16 cases of 4 to 6 dilutions, and 10 cases
of 7 or more dilutions. However, 13 out of 15 of these patients
for whom postmortem examination was available, despite evidence
of several intravitam negative CSF cultures, still had cryptococcal
meningitis or disseminated disease at autopsy (demonstrated
by histopathology). Eight patients had an increase in the CSF
antigen titer (four of 1 to 3 dilutions and four of 4 to 8 dilutions),
and five showed stable (i.e., the same value) results throughout
the follow-up. All the patients but two with an increase of
CSF antigen titer had persistent positive CSF culture and died;
four underwent autopsy showing disseminated cryptococcosis.
Our experience regarding the role of cryptococcal antigen to
monitor antifungal therapy in AIDS patients is in keeping with
that previously reported by Powderly et al. (
11), who showed
the lack of any correlation of changes of CSF or serum cryptococcal
antigen and the outcome of cryptococcal meningitis. However,
a high CSF antigen level has been identified as a sign of poor
prognosis in patients with AIDS (
1,
7); interestingly, more
recently Thay cohorts of HIV-positive patients with cryptococcal
meningitis showed a significant positive correlation between
CSF cryptococcal colony-forming units (CFU) and CSF cryptococcal
antigen titers at baseline (
P < 0.0001), but the rapid rate
of decline in CSF CFU was not correlated with that in CSF cryptococcal
antigen titers (
2).
As shown in Table 1, regardless of the different hosts in whom cryptococcal meningitis is diagnosed, among all methods employed the cryptococcal CSF antigen had the best overall sensitivity (94.1%) followed by the serum antigen (93.6%). However, some differences were observed in the different categories of hosts, with lower sensitivity in AIDS and immunocompetent patients (92%) and higher sensitivity among the other immunocompromised hosts without HIV infection. Persistently elevated CSF cryptococcal antigen in HIV-infected patients carries a poor prognosis and indicates ongoing production of viable Cryptococcus neoformans in tissue. In conclusion, CSF cryptococcal antigen seems to be the best test for diagnosis of cryptococcal meningitis in terms of sensitivity, but it is an unreliable tool, at least among HIV-positive patients, to drive therapeutic monitoring, particularly in assessing the point of discontinuation of antifungal therapy in HIV-infected patients.

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Spinello Antinori*
Anna Radice
Laura Galimberti
Department of Clinical Sciences L. Sacco University of Milan Via GB Grassi 74, 20157 Milan, Italy
Carlo Magni
I Division of Infectious Diseases L. Sacco Hospital Milan, Italy
Marco Fasan
II Division of Infectious Diseases L. Sacco Hospital Milan, Italy
Carlo Parravicini
Pathology Unit L. Sacco Hospital Via GB Grassi 74, 20157 Milan, Italy
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* Phone: 390239042668Fax: 390250319758E-mail: spinello.antinori{at}unimi.it |
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, November 2005, p. 5828-5829, Vol. 43, No. 11
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.11.5828-5829.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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