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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, April 2008, p. 681-683, Vol. 15, No. 4
1071-412X/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00358-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Infectious Diseases, Arnulfo Arias Madrid Hospital, Panama City, Panama,1 MiraVista Diagnostics, Indianapolis, Indiana,2 Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin3
Received 3 September 2007/ Returned for modification 15 October 2007/ Accepted 7 February 2008
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3%) (7). Disease in patients in Mexico and Latin America has been described as being caused by isolates of Histoplasma capsulatum var. capsulatum that exhibit distinct genetic profiles in comparison to those from the United States (3, 8, 9). Keath et al. (9) first described typing based upon restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) in the YPS3 gene. They showed that Panamanian strains were typed as YPS3 class 3, 5, or 6, while the North American strains were predominantly class 2. Later, Kasuga et al. used the DNA sequence substitution rates in four independent protein-coding genes to identify at least eight different genotypes, or clades (8). North American class 2 was the predominant genotype in the United States and Latin American group A in Latin America. Latin American group B was found only in Columbia and Argentina. Based on only four isolates from Panama included in the study by Kasuga et al., Panamanian strains included Latin American group A and a lone lineage, designated H81.
The diagnosis of PDH relies on demonstration of the organism in clinical specimens or detection of antigen in body fluids (2). Histopathology may be falsely negative in up to 50% of patients, caused by sampling error, paucity of organisms, or inexperience of the pathologist. Culture may require several weeks to isolate and identify the organism and may be falsely negative for 15% of patients (13). Antigenuria can be detected in 95% of cases in patients with AIDS in the United States (4, 13) but has not been evaluated in Latin America. Whether genetic differences in Latin American isolates would affect the sensitivity for diagnosis by antigen detection is unknown. The prevalence of PDH in AIDS patients from Panama offered the opportunity to address this question.
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Methods. We collected samples of serum and urine from Panamanian patients with AIDS and clinical suspicion of PDH who were admitted to the AIDS ward of the Arnulfo Arias Madrid Hospital in Panama City, Panama, from December 2005 through November 2006. All of the samples were taken before the start of antifungal therapy, referred to as baseline, and then stored frozen at –20°C. Samples were shipped in batches to MiraVista Diagnostics on three occasions during the course of the study, according to International Air Transport Association regulations.
We included 21 patients with PDH in the study. The study was approved by the institution's review board and followed guidelines for clinical research. All patients read and signed an informed-consent form before the samples were taken. The investigators also completed a case report form for each patient with demographic and clinically relevant data.
For comparison, paired serum and urine specimens collected at enrollment or week 1 or 2 of treatment from 65 AIDS patients in the United States with PDH who participated in a fluconazole treatment study (11) were also tested. The basis for diagnosis was positive culture or histopathology in 92% of cases and positive antigen in urine in 8% of cases. These specimens were obtained from 1991 and 1992 and had been stored frozen since original collection for a study conducted by the AIDS Clinical Trials Group, in accordance with institutional guidelines for clinical research.
Genotyping of isolates using the YPS3 gene. The isolates were identified based on both the size of the PCR-amplified YPS3 gene (3) and RFLP pattern analysis of the HaeIII-digested YPS3 locus. Briefly, DNA from H. capsulatum isolates was obtained with a MasterPure yeast DNA purification kit (Epicenter, Madison, WI). The primers used to amplify the YPS3 locus were Yps3F (5'-ATGCTGAACATCAAATCGATCTC-3') and Yps3R (5'-TTATGCCTCGCAGTGTTTATAAAGC-3') (3). PCR was performed using the high-fidelity polymerase Triplemaster (Eppendorf, Westbury, NY) with buffer components provided by the supplier. The amplification parameters were as follows: an initial denaturation step at 95°C for 5 min, followed by 25 cycles which consisted of denaturation at 95°C for 30 s, annealing at 53°C for 30 s, and extension at 72°C for 1 min. PCR products were separated on a 2% agarose gel, and their sizes were determined using a 50-bp DNA ladder (NEB, Ipswich, MA). The sizes of the amplified YPS3 sequences were compared with those for appropriate RFLP class-defined control strains [UCLA531S, RFLP class 1; G217B (ATCC 26032), RFLP class 2; G186B (ATCC 26030), RFLP class 3; JHMA(H502), RFLP class 5; and CFLA(H248), RFLP class 6]. In addition, PCR products were digested with HaeIII according to the manufacturer's recommendations (Boehringer, Mannheim, Germany), and digestion products were analyzed after separation on a 2% agarose gel. The unique RFLP patterns were compared with those obtained from the control strains listed above.
MVista Histoplasma antigen EIA. This method was reported previously (4) and will be briefly described. The test is a sandwich enzyme immunoassay (EIA) using microplates coated with polyclonal rabbit anti-Histoplasma antibodies. Patient specimens and galactomannan calibrators and controls are incubated in the precoated plates, permitting binding of antigen to the capture antibody. Bound antigen is then detected with a biotinylated detector antibody. The microplates are read spectrophotometrically, and optical densities that are more than three times that of the negative control are classified as positive; antigen is quantitated in ng/ml by extrapolation from a calibration curve. Specimens with optical densities that exceed the cutoff for the assay but that are less than the 0.6-ng/ml standard are reported as positive, <0.6 ng/ml, and those with results exceeding the 39-ng/ml standard are reported as positive, >39 ng/ml; all others are read directly from the curve. All of the specimens were tested in a single batch. Testing was performed at MiraVista Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN.
Statistical analysis. The respective proportion of patients with positive antigenuria or antigenemia among patients from Panama was compared to that from the United States by using Fisher's exact test. Quantitative antigen results in serum or urine from both patient groups were compared using the Mann-Whitney rank sum test.
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Antigen levels were similar in patients from Panama and the United States (Fig. 1). The urine antigen test was positive in 20 of 21 (95.2%) of Panamanian cases versus 65 of 65 (100%) of U.S. cases (P = 0.244). The median urinary antigen level was also similar between Panamanian and U.S. cases, 18.8 ng/ml (range, none detected to >39.0 ng/ml; 95% confidence interval [CI], 8.4 to 40.0), versus 37.0 ng/ml (range, 0.71 to >39.0 ng/ml; 95% CI, 26.0 to 40.0) (P = 0.088). Serum antigen was positive in 18 of 19 (94.7%) Panamanian cases versus 60 of 65 (92%) U.S. cases (P = 1.0). The median serum antigen level was 11.7 ng/ml (range, none detected to >39.0 ng/ml; 95% CI, 4.9 to 20.0) in the Panamanian group versus 17.0 ng/ml (range, none detected to >39 ng/ml; 95% CI, 9.2 to 31.7) in the U.S. cases (P = 0.155).
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FIG. 1. Urine and serum antigen in patients with AIDS and PDH. The solid horizontal line represents the cutoff for positivity and the dashed lines the lowest (0.6 ng/ml) or highest (39 ng/ml) calibrator. Each point represents a single case.
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We previously noted the sensitivity for diagnosis of PDH in AIDS patients from Panama to be 67% for blood cultures, 51% for bone marrow cultures, and only 24% for histopathology of bone marrow biopsy (6). The low sensitivity of nonculture methods and delay in diagnosis by culture supports the value of the antigen test for diagnosis of PDH in Panamanian patients. Of note is that specimens from patients with other endemic mycoses are cross-reactive in the MVista Histoplasma antigen EIA (10, 12). However, cross-reactivity does not reduce the usefulness of the test for rapid diagnosis, since treatment decisions and regimens are similar and in most cases the causative organism can be suspected based on epidemiological or clinical findings or proven by histopathology, culture, or serology.
In summary, antigenemia and antigenuria were present in similar proportions of patients from the United States and Panama, showing the potential use of the MVista Histoplasma antigen EIA for diagnosis of PDH in Panama and probably other Latin American countries.
Published ahead of print on 20 February 2008. ![]()
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