Affiliation:
1. VCU Medical Center, Richmond, Virginia
2. University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa
3. University of Texas Health Sciences Center, San Antonio, Texas
4. The HPA Centre for Infections, Kingsdown, Bristol, United Kingdom
5. Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, Madrid, Spain
6. Hospital la Fe, Valencia, Spain
7. Women's and Children's Hospital, North Adelaide, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clinical breakpoints have not been established for mold testing. Wild-type (WT) MIC distributions (organisms in a species/drug combination with no detectable acquired resistance mechanisms) were defined in order to establish epidemiologic cutoff values (ECVs) for five
Aspergillus
spp. and itraconazole, posaconazole, and voriconazole. Also, we have expanded prior ECV data for
Aspergillus fumigatus.
The number of available isolates varied according to the species/triazole combination as follows: 1,684 to 2,815 for
A. fumigatus
, 323 to 592 for
A. flavus
, 131 to 143 for
A. nidulans
, 366 to 520 for
A. niger
, 330 to 462 for
A. terreus
, and 45 to 84 for
A. versicolor
. CLSI broth microdilution MIC data gathered in five independent laboratories in Europe and the United States were aggregated for the analyses. ECVs expressed in μg/ml were as follows (percentages of isolates for which MICs were equal to or less than the ECV are in parentheses):
A. fumigatus
, itraconazole, 1 (98.8%); posaconazole, 0.5 (99.2%); voriconazole, 1 (97.7%);
A. flavus
, itraconazole, 1 (99.6%); posaconazole, 0.25 (95%); voriconazole, 1 (98.1%);
A. nidulans
, itraconazole, 1 (95%); posaconazole, 1 (97.7%); voriconazole, 2 (99.3%);
A. niger
, itraconazole, 2 (100%); posaconazole, 0.5 (96.9%); voriconazole, 2 (99.4%);
A. terreus
, itraconazole, 1 (100%); posaconazole, 0.5 (99.7%); voriconazole, 1 (99.1%);
A. versicolor
, itraconazole, 2 (100%); posaconazole, 1 (not applicable); voriconazole, 2 (97.5%). Although ECVs do not predict therapy outcome as clinical breakpoints do, they may aid in detection of azole resistance (non-WT MIC) due to
cyp51A
mutations, a resistance mechanism in some
Aspergillus
spp. These ECVs should be considered for inclusion in the future CLSI M38-A2 document revision.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology