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Diagnostic accuracy cohort study and clinical value of the Histoplasma urine antigen (ALPHA Histoplasma EIA) for disseminated histoplasmosis among HIV infected patients: A multicenter study.


ABSTRACT:

Background

The Histoplasma urine antigen (HUAg) is the preferred method to diagnose progressive disseminated histoplasmosis (PDH) in HIV patients. In 2007, IMMY ALPHA Histoplasma EIA was approved for clinical for on-site use, and therefore useful for regions outside the United States. However, ALPHA-HUAg is considered inferior to the MVista-HUAg which is only available on referral. We aim to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of ALPHA-HUAg.

Methodology/principal findings

We conducted a multicenter, prospective, diagnostic test study in two secondary and eight tertiary-care facilities in Mexico. We included HIV patient with PDH suspicion and evaluated ALPHA-HUAg diagnostic accuracy using as reference standard the Histoplasma capsulatum growth on blood, bone marrow, and tissue cultures or compatible histopathologic exam (PDH-proven). We evaluated the results of 288 patients, 29.5% (85/288; 95% confidence interval [CI], 24.3-35.1) had PDH. The sensitivity of ALPHA-HUAg was 67.1% (95% CI, 56-76.8%) and the specificity was 97.5% (95% CI, 94.3%-99.1%). The positive likelihood ratio was 27.2 (95% CI; 11.6-74.4). In 10.5% of the PDH-proven patients, a co-existing opportunistic infection was diagnosed, mostly disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex infection.

Conclusions/significance

We observed a high specificity but low sensitivity of IMMY-HUAg. The test may be useful to start early antifungals, but a culture-based approach is necessary since co-infections are frequent and a negative IMMY-HUAg result does not rule out PDH.

SUBMITTER: Torres-Gonzalez P 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6237426 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Diagnostic accuracy cohort study and clinical value of the Histoplasma urine antigen (ALPHA Histoplasma EIA) for disseminated histoplasmosis among HIV infected patients: A multicenter study.

Torres-González Pedro P   Niembro-Ortega María Dolores MD   Martínez-Gamboa Areli A   Ahumada-Topete Víctor Hugo VH   Andrade-Villanueva Jaime J   Araujo-Meléndez Javier J   Chaparro-Sánchez Alberto A   Crabtree-Ramírez Brenda B   Cruz-Martínez Sofia S   Gamboa-Domínguez Armando A   Flores-Barrientos Oscar I OI   Gaytán-Martínez Jesús Enrique JE   González-Hernández Luz Alicia LA   Hernández-León Christian C   Lozano-Fernandez Víctor Hugo VH   Manríquez-Reyes Marisol M   Magaña-Aquino Martin M   Martínez-Ayala Pedro P   Ramírez-Hinojosa Juan Pablo JP   Rangel-Cordero Andrea A   Rivera-Martínez Norma Erendira NE   Reyes-Gutiérrez Edgardo E   Reyes-Terán Gustavo G   Rodríguez-Zulueta Patricia P   Ruíz-Quiñones Jesús J   Santiago-Cruz Janeth J   Velázquez-Zavala Nancy Guadalupe NG   Sifuentes-Osornio José J   Ponce de León Alfredo A  

PLoS neglected tropical diseases 20181105 11


<h4>Background</h4>The Histoplasma urine antigen (HUAg) is the preferred method to diagnose progressive disseminated histoplasmosis (PDH) in HIV patients. In 2007, IMMY ALPHA Histoplasma EIA was approved for clinical for on-site use, and therefore useful for regions outside the United States. However, ALPHA-HUAg is considered inferior to the MVista-HUAg which is only available on referral. We aim to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of ALPHA-HUAg.<h4>Methodology/principal findings</h4>We conducte  ...[more]

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