Abstract

Infections by the basidiomycete yeast Cryptococcus neoformans are life-threatening diseases claiming more than 600,000 lives every year. The most common manifestation is cryptococcal meningitis in AIDS patients. Diagnosis primarily relies on antigen testing from serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Current guidelines recommend rapid antigen testing with a focus on point-of-care assays. Over the recent years, a range of new lateral flow assays (LFAs) was launched. There is still a lack of data evaluating the CE-certified Biosynex RDT CryptoPS LFA. We compared the performance of this LFA with a latex agglutination assay (LAA; Latex-Cryptococcus Antigen Detection System, IMMY) from blood and CSF samples. Blood and/or CSF samples of 27 patients with proven cryptococcal infections caused by different species and blood–CSF pairs of 20 controls were tested applying LFA and LAA. Upon combined analysis of blood and CSF, both assays were able to identify all C. neoformans infections. Based on CSF analysis only, the LFA and the LAA had sensitivities of 100% and 93%. Neither test gave false-positive results nor was reactive in two cases of C. non-neoformans/non-gattii species infections. Both assays have high sensitivities and specificities for the diagnosis of C. neoformans infection. Contrarily to the IMMY LAA, the RDT CryptoPS LFA is suitable as a point-of-care test but is limited in the quantification of antigen reactivity.

Highlights

  • Invasive fungal infections claim more lives every year than any other infectious disease except tuberculosis [1, 2]

  • Individuals suffering from advanced HIV infection are mostly endangered: cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is one of the most common AIDS-defining diseases and accounts for up to 15% of all AIDS-related deaths [8]

  • We evaluated the performance of the RDT CryptoPS lateral flow assay (LFA) for the detection of cryptococcal capsule antigen in a European cohort

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive fungal infections claim more lives every year than any other infectious disease except tuberculosis [1, 2]. Almost half of the 1.5 million deaths caused by invasive mycoses are caused by a single fungal genus: the basidiomycete yeast Cryptococcus. In the past, this genus was subject of extensive taxonomic reclassification, reducing this previously highly polyphyletic group from more than 100 to ten species [3, 4]. Institut für Hygiene und Mikrobiologie, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany. Nationales Referenzzentrum für Invasive Pilzinfektionen (NRZMyk), Jena, Germany. Individuals suffering from advanced HIV infection are mostly endangered: cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is one of the most common AIDS-defining diseases and accounts for up to 15% of all AIDS-related deaths [8]

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