1. Clinical utility of fungal culture and antifungal susceptibility in cats and dogs with histoplasmosis.
- Author
-
Hanzlicek AS, KuKanich KS, Cook AK, Hodges S, Thomason JM, DeSilva R, Ramachandran A, and Durkin MM
- Subjects
- Cats, Dogs, Animals, Antifungal Agents pharmacology, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Fluconazole pharmacology, Fluconazole therapeutic use, Itraconazole pharmacology, Itraconazole therapeutic use, Histoplasma, Microbial Sensitivity Tests veterinary, Histoplasmosis diagnosis, Histoplasmosis drug therapy, Histoplasmosis veterinary, Dog Diseases diagnosis, Dog Diseases drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Culture can be used for diagnosis and antifungal susceptibility testing in animals with fungal infections. Limited information is available regarding the diagnostic performance of culture and the susceptibility patterns of Histoplasma spp. isolates., Hypothesis/objectives: Describe the clinical utility of culture and the susceptibility patterns of Histoplasma spp. isolates causing histoplasmosis in cats and dogs., Animals: Seventy-one client-owned animals, including 33 cats and 19 dogs with proven or probable histoplasmosis., Methods: Culture was attempted from tissue or fluid samples. Diagnostic performance of culture, cytopathology, and antigen detection were compared with final diagnosis. Susceptibility to antifungal agents was determined for a subset (11 from dogs, 9 from cats) of culture isolates., Results: Culture had a diagnostic sensitivity of 17/33 (52%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 34%-69%) and 15/19 (79%; 95% CI, 61%-97%) and specificity of 6/6 (100%; 95% CI, 54%-100%) and 10/10 (100%; 95% CI, 69%-100%) in cats and dogs, respectively. Culture was not positive in any animal in which cytopathology and antigen testing were negative. Target drug exposure (area under the concentration curve [AUC]/minimum inhibitory concentration [MIC] >25) should be easily achieved for all isolates for itraconazole, voriconazole, or posaconazole. Five of 20 (25%) isolates had fluconazole MIC ≥32 μg/mL and achieving target drug exposure is unlikely., Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Fungal culture did not improve diagnostic sensitivity when used with cytopathology and antigen detection. Susceptibility testing might help identify isolates for which fluconazole is less likely to be effective., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF