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Comparison of a Novel Rapid Lateral Flow Assay to Enzyme Immunoassay Results for Early Diagnosis of Coccidioidomycosis

Fariba Donovan, Ferris A. Ramadan, Sher Ali Khan, Apoorva Bhaskara, William Lainhart, A Narang, Jarrod Mosier, Katherine Ellingson, Edward J. Bedrick, Michael A. Saubolle, John N. Galgiani

2020Clinical Infectious Diseases50 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coccidioidomycosis (CM) is a common cause of community-acquired pneumonia where CM is endemic. Manifestations include self-limited pulmonary infection, chronic fibrocavitary pulmonary disease, and disseminated coccidioidomycosis. Most infections are identified by serological assays including enzyme-linked immunoassay (EIA), complement fixation, and immunodiffusion. These are time-consuming and take days to result, impeding early diagnosis. A new lateral flow assay (LFA; Sōna; IMMY, Norman, OK) improves time-to-result to 1 hour. METHODS: We prospectively enrolled 392 patients with suspected CM, compared the LFA with standard EIA and included procalcitonin evaluation. RESULTS: Compared with standard EIA, LFA demonstrates 31% sensitivity (95% confidence interval [CI], 20-44%) and 92% specificity (95% CI, 88-95%). Acute pulmonary disease (74%) was the most common clinical syndrome. Hospitalized patients constituted 75% of subjects, and compared with outpatients, they more frequently had ≥3 previous healthcare facility visits (P = .05), received antibacterials (P < .01), and had >3 antibacterial courses (P < .01). Procalcitonin (PCT) was <0.25 ng/mL in 52 (83%) EIA-positive patients, suggesting infection was not bacterial. CONCLUSIONS: When CM is a possible diagnosis, LFA identified nearly one-third of EIA-positive infections. Combined with PCT <0.25 ng/mL, LFA could reduce unnecessary antibacterial use by 77%.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineProcalcitoninSerologyImmunoassayPneumoniaInternal medicineComplement fixation testConfidence intervalGastroenterologyImmunologyAntibodySepsisFungal Infections and StudiesActinomycetales infections and treatmentWhipple's Disease and Interleukins
Comparison of a Novel Rapid Lateral Flow Assay to Enzyme Immunoassay Results for Early Diagnosis of Coccidioidomycosis | Litcius