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Comparative Study
. 1992 Jul 25;340(8813):203-6.
doi: 10.1016/0140-6736(92)90469-j.

Improved diagnosis of Pneumocystis carinii infection by polymerase chain reaction on induced sputum and blood

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Improved diagnosis of Pneumocystis carinii infection by polymerase chain reaction on induced sputum and blood

G Y Lipschik et al. Lancet. .

Abstract

Detection of Pneumocystis carinii by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) may facilitate non-invasive diagnosis of P carinii pneumonia and study of its epidemiology. We have compared the sensitivity and specificity of two PCR methods with those of conventional staining for detection of P carinii in induced sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BAL), and blood. Of 71 sputum samples, 17 were from patients with microbiologically confirmed P carinii pneumonia. A nested PCR method correctly identified the presence of P carinii in all 17 (100% sensitive, 95% confidence interval [CI] 81-100%) and found no organisms in 50 of 54 microbiologically negative samples (93% specific, 95% CI 82-98%). PCR with a single primer pair was 71% sensitive (44-90%) and 94% specific (85-99%). The sensitivity of conventional staining methods (direct and indirect fluorescence antibody and toluidine-blue-O tests) was significantly less (38-53%) than that of nested PCR (p less than 0.05). In BAL, neither PCR method was significantly better than the conventional staining methods. P carinii was detected in BAL or sputum from 10 immunocompromised patients without microbiological evidence of P carinii pneumonia, which suggests that symptom-free carriers or subclinical infection can exist. P carinii was detected by nested PCR in blood from 2 of 3 patients with disseminated pneumocystosis but in only 1 of 11 patients with P carinii infection restricted to the lungs. Nested PCR on induced sputum is more sensitive than conventional staining methods for the diagnosis of P carinii pneumonia and provides a non-invasive method of detecting disseminated disease.

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