Diagnostic Utility of Endotracheal Aspirate Galactomannan for Invasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis in ICU Patients
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Background
Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) is a serious infection in critically ill patients. Galactomannan detection in endotracheal aspirates (ETA) has emerged as a promising non-invasive diagnostic method. This study evaluates the supportive diagnostic value of ETA galactomannan in ICU patients suspected to have IPA.
Methods
We conducted a prospective observational cohort study over two years, enrolling 120 patients in the medicine ICU at a tertiary care centre in India (January 2022 to October 2023). Patients aged over 14 years on mechanical ventilation for >48 hours meeting the entry criteria of the BM-AspICU algorithm were included. ETA galactomannan was measured and correlated with IPA classification.
Results
Of 120 patients, 37% (n=44) had probable IPA and 63% (n=76) were classified as colonisers or possible IPA. The optimal ETA galactomannan cut-off was 1.097, yielding sensitivity 72.73% (95% CI 57.2–85.0%), specificity 84.2% (95% CI 74.4–90.7%), PLR 4.86, NLR 0.35, and AUC 0.844
Conclusion
ETA galactomannan supports IPA diagnosis with favourable sensitivity and specificity. However, given the limitations of clinical scoring-based reference standards and the potential plateau in colonizer reduction at higher cut-offs, it should be integrated into a comprehensive diagnostic approach incorporating clinical, radiological, and microbiological criteria.