Aspergillus Galactomannan Antigen Detection, Bronchoalveolar Lavage or Serum
Use
Patients diagnosed with chronic granulomatous disease and/or Job's syndrome may yield a reduced detection of galactomannan.1 Reduced assay sensitivity may occur in patients receiving concomitant antifungal therapy.2 Penicillium species, Alternaria species, Paecilomyces species, Geotrichum species, and Histoplasma species have demonstrated reactivity with the monoclonal antibodies used in the assay and may, therefore, yield a positive test result. Positive results in patients with no clinical signs of disease have been reported, especially in young children.3 Most of these are considered to be false positives. Young children may have a positive assay result due to the presence of galactofuranaase contained in various foods (cereals) and milk. Patients receiving piperacillin/tazobactam or semisynthetic beta-lactamase therapy may have false-positive results.4,5 False-positive results may also occur with use of PLASMA-LYTE™ for either intravenous hydration or BAL specimen collection.6
Special Instructions
Avoid opening the specimen after collection to prevent contamination. Do not aliquot; transport in sealed tubes. The patient's Social Security number is required for serial monitoring.
Limitations
A negative result does not exclude the possibility of invasive aspergillosis. Patients at high risk should be tested bi-weekly for comprehensive monitoring. Results near the cutoff index of 0.5 should be interpreted cautiously with other diagnostic data. Various substances and conditions, including antifungal treatments and specific antibiotics, can cause false positives or affect the sensitivity of the assay.
Methodology
Immunoassay (EIA)
Biomarkers
LOINC Codes
- 62467-6
- 62467-6
- 80563-0
Result Turnaround Time
1-5 days
Related Documents
For more information, please review the documents below
Specimen
Serum
Volume
2 mL
Minimum Volume
0.35 mL
Container
Red-top tube or gel-barrier serum separator tube
Collection Instructions
Collect using aseptic technique. Pour-off specimens and those sent in non-sterile containers are rejected.
Patient Preparation
Usual aseptic technique
Storage Instructions
Refrigerate unopened serum for up to five days. Separated serum can be frozen at -70°C.
Causes for Rejection
Unlabeled specimen, name discrepancy, inappropriate collection tube, hemolyzed, lipemic, or icteric blood specimens, non-sterile containers, inadequate volume, leaking specimens, improperly stored or transported specimens.
Stability Requirements
| Temperature | Period |
|---|---|
| Room Temperature | Not stable |
| Refrigerated | 5 days (unopened) |
| Frozen | -70°C for up to 5 months |
