Detection of fungal pathogens by a new broad range real-time PCR assay targeting the fungal ITS2 region
Autor: | Iris Zeller, Claudia Schabereiter-Gurtner, Birgit Willinger, Brigitte Selitsch, Verena Mihalits, Athanasios Makristathis, Alexander M. Hirschl, Wolfgang Barousch |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Microbiology (medical) 030106 microbiology Pcr assay Context (language use) General Medicine Fungal DNA Biology Amplicon Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction Sensitivity and Specificity Microbiology Paraffin embedded 03 medical and health sciences Real-time polymerase chain reaction Mycoses Humans DNA Intergenic Culture negative DNA Fungal Pathogen |
Zdroj: | Journal of Medical Microbiology. 66:1383-1392 |
ISSN: | 1473-5644 0022-2615 |
DOI: | 10.1099/jmm.0.000575 |
Popis: | Purpose. The rise in the incidence of fungal infections and the expanding spectrum of fungal pathogens make early and broad detection of fungal pathogens essential. In the present study, a panfungal real-time PCR assay for the broad-range detection of fungal DNA (Fungi assay) in a wide variety of clinical specimens was developed. Methodology. Our in-house, HybProbe real-time PCR assay targets the ITS2 region of fungal DNA. The applicability was evaluated by testing 105 clinical samples from 98 patients with suspected fungal infection. Samples included tissue biopsies, paraffin embedded tissues, aspirates, EDTA-anticoagulated blood, cerebrospinal fluids and bronchoalveolar lavages. Results. Fungal pathogens were identified by the Fungi assay in 47 samples. In all of these cases, conventional methods and clinical data were also indicative for a fungal infection. Five samples were interpreted false negative. blast analyses of the amplicons derived from 11 samples revealed the presence of environmental fungal species while other tests and clinical data did not suggest a fungal infection. This fact might indicate contaminated samples. The remaining 42 samples were negative by the Fungi assay as well as the conventional methods and were therefore regarded as true negatives. Thus, sensitivity was 90.4 % and specificity 79.2 %. Conclusion. The Fungi assay improved the targeted diagnosis of fungal infections allowing pathogen identification in samples that were histologically positive but culture negative. For reliable diagnosis, results have to be interpreted in context with conventional methods and clinical data. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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