Published June 24, 2015
| Version v1
Journal article
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Correlation between Circulating Fungal Biomarkers and Clinical Outcome in Invasive Aspergillosis
Creators
- 1. Johns Hopkins University
- 2. Merck & Co.
- 3. University of Chicago
- 4. Fred Hutchinson Center
- 5. University of Texas
- 6. State University of New York
- 7. University Hospital Gasthuisberg
Description
Objective means are needed to predict and assess clinical response in patients treated for invasive aspergillosis (IA). We examined whether early changes in serum galactomannan (GM) and/or β-D-glucan (BDG) can predict clinical outcomes. Patients with proven or probable IA were prospectively enrolled, and serial GM and BDG levels and GM optical density indices (GMI) were calculated twice weekly for 6 weeks following initiation of standard-of-care antifungal therapy. Changes in these biomarkers during the first 2 and 6 weeks of treatment were analyzed for associations with clinical response and survival at weeks 6 and 12. Among 47 patients with IA, 53.2% (25/47) and 65.9% (27/41) had clinical response by weeks 6 and 12, respectively. Changes in biomarkers during the first 2 weeks were associated with clinical response at 6 weeks (GMI, P = 0.03) and 12 weeks (GM+BDG composite, P = 0.05; GM, P = 0.04; GMI, P = 0.02). Changes in biomarkers during the first 6 weeks were also associated with clinical response at 6 weeks (GM, P = 0.05; GMI, P = 0.03) and 12 weeks (BDG+GM, P = 0.02; GM, P = 0.02; GMI, P = 0.01). Overall survival rates at 6 weeks and 12 weeks were 87.2% (41/47) and 79.1% (34/43), respectively. Decreasing biomarkers in the first 2 weeks were associated with survival at 6 weeks (BDG+GM, P = 0.03; BDG, P = 0.01; GM, P = 0.03) and at 12 weeks (BDG+GM, P = 0.01; BDG, P = 0.03; GM, P = 0.01; GMI, P = 0.007). Similar correlations occurred for biomarkers measured over 6 weeks. Patients with negative baseline GMI and/or persistently negative GMI during the first 2 weeks were more likely to have CR and survival. These results suggest that changes of biomarkers may be informative to predict and/or assess response to therapy and survival in patients treated for IA.
Data availability
To protect the privacy and confidentiality of research participants, there are restrictions on the availability of data from this study (see Merck’s data sharing policy at http://engagezone.merck.com/ds_documentation.html). Requests for data access can be submitted to: dataaccess@merck.com.
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pone.0129022
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:9576
Funding
- Merck, Sharp & Dohme Corp.