An aspergillus immunodiffusion test in the early diagnosis of aspergillosis in adult leukemia patients.

Abstract
An Aspergillus fumigatus immunodiffusion test was performed biweekly for one year on 80 hospitalized patients with acute leukemia to determine if serologic conversion accompanied clinical aspergillosis. A micro-ouchterlony technique with agarose was used. The antigens were prepared from concentrated A. fumigatus culture filtrates and the sera were concentrated 3-fold before testing. Of 80 patients, 10 were proved at autopsy, lung biopsy, or closed space culture to have invasive aspergillosis. Six of 10 patients converted from a negative to a positive immunodiffusion test, whereas a seventh patient's weakly positive test became strongly positive. Three patients with documented aspergillosis did not develop a positive immunodiffusion test. Four of the patients who converted from a negative to a positive test were treated early and successfully with amphotericin B. A fifth patient developed immunodiffusion test antibody late in the course and died despite therapy. A sixth patient died of concomitant mucormycosis despite early therapy. Six additional patients who converted from a negative to a positive immunodiffusion test could not be evaluated because of inadequate documentation of aspergillosis. In severely immunosuppressed patients, our immunodiffusion test proved to be a specific but not always a sensitive test for aspergillosis. In 4 patients, biweekly tests showed conversion associated with invasive aspergillosis, which was diagnosed early and treated successfully.

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