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Detection of Pneumocystis jirovecii in oral wash from immunosuppressed patients as a diagnostic tool

Authors :
Hviid, Cecilie Juul
Ellermann-Eriksen, Svend
Jespersen, Bente
Dam, Mette Yde
Dahlerup, Jens Frederik
Benfield, Thomas
Jespersen, Sanne
Østergaard, Lars Jørgen
Laursen, Alex Lund
Hviid, Cecilie Juul
Ellermann-Eriksen, Svend
Jespersen, Bente
Dam, Mette Yde
Dahlerup, Jens Frederik
Benfield, Thomas
Jespersen, Sanne
Østergaard, Lars Jørgen
Laursen, Alex Lund
Source :
Hviid , C J , Ellermann-Eriksen , S , Jespersen , B , Dam , M Y , Dahlerup , J F , Benfield , T , Jespersen , S , Østergaard , L J & Laursen , A L 2017 , ' Detection of Pneumocystis jirovecii in oral wash from immunosuppressed patients as a diagnostic tool ' , PLOS ONE , vol. 12 , no. 3 , e0174012 .
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diagnosis of Pneumocystis jirovecii (PJ) pneumonia ordinarily requires invasive procedures that could be avoided by PCR methodologies, if these could be designed with adequate cut-off values for confounding background carriage.METHODS: We designed a novel quantitative real-time PCR assay to detect the mitochondrial large subunit rRNA gene of PJ in oral washes. To benchmark levels of PJ carriage versus infection, we tested asymptomatic immunosuppressed patients including Danish (n = 88) and West African HIV-infected (n = 142) patients, renal transplant recipients (n = 51), rheumatologic patients (n = 102), patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (n = 98), and healthy blood donors (controls, n = 50). The fungal burden in patients with PJ pneumonia (PCP, n = 7) was also investigated.RESULTS: Danish HIV-infected patients (with viremia/low CD4) and recent transplant recipients were at most risk of being carriers (prevalence of 23% and 16.7% respectively), whereas PJ was rarely detected among rheumatologic patients, patients with inflammatory bowel diseases, and untreated West African HIV patients. PJ was not detected among healthy controls. The fungal burden in patients with PCP fell rapidly on treatment.CONCLUSIONS: The quantitative PCR method described could conceivably discriminate between carriage and disease, given suitable threshold values for the former, and predict treatment efficacy by measures of the fungal burden in daily oral washes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Hviid , C J , Ellermann-Eriksen , S , Jespersen , B , Dam , M Y , Dahlerup , J F , Benfield , T , Jespersen , S , Østergaard , L J & Laursen , A L 2017 , ' Detection of Pneumocystis jirovecii in oral wash from immunosuppressed patients as a diagnostic tool ' , PLOS ONE , vol. 12 , no. 3 , e0174012 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1322708781
Document Type :
Electronic Resource