Abstract

Several factors can cause false-positive results in the galactomannan (GM) test; however, others remain unknown. Presently, the impact of airborne contamination by Aspergillus conidia during enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) remains uninvestigated. We studied 12 A. fumigatus isolates. Fungal conidia were serially diluted and tested for GM detection using the Platelia® Aspergillus enzyme immunoassay (EIA). The conidia concentration required for an EIA-positive result was 4.8 × 103 (median). This is the first study to evaluate the impact of environmental contamination on the Platelia® Aspergillus EIA assay. Only massive contamination can interfere with GM optical readings, suggesting that environmental contamination does not cause false-positive test results.

Highlights

  • Several factors can cause false-positive results in the galactomannan (GM) test; others remain unknown

  • We studied 12 A. fumigatus isolates

  • This is the first study to evaluate the impact of environmental contamination on the Platelia® Aspergillus enzyme immunoassay (EIA) assay

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Summary

Introduction

Abstract Introduction: Several factors can cause false-positive results in the galactomannan (GM) test; others remain unknown. Fungal conidia were serially diluted and tested for GM detection using the Platelia® Aspergillus enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Conclusions: This is the first study to evaluate the impact of environmental contamination on the Platelia® Aspergillus EIA assay.

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