65F w/ history of heart transplant on tacrolimus, prednisone, & mycophenolate, presents w/ SOB and fatigue. Vitals are normal. Exam is notable for tender red bumps on the shins bilaterally. Labs are notable for absolute eosinophil count of 800
2/ CT chest shows scattered pulmonary nodules throughout. The team decides to order a serum beta-d-glucan (BDG)
Which of the following potential causes of her skin and pulmonary nodules is most likely to result in a positive serum BDG?
1/14
Answer: Cocci!
Although no epi history was provided here, you can use several clues to get to the answer: eosinophilia, erythema nodosum, and +BDG
Although Crypto and Blasto can rarely cause +BDG, Cocci is much more likely to have a positive BDG
4/ Using BDG for Cocci may depend on its life cycle. Cocci spherules (in hosts) have 60% BDG by dry weight, whereas arthroconidia (in environment) contain 20% BDG
5/ Before diving into which Cocci antibody tests to send, we need to be able to recognize coccidioidomycosis. As with all fungal infections, Cocci diagnosis relies on host, clinical, radiographic, and laboratory features
6/ The most common things you will find in the exposure history is travel to or residing in an endemic area (like the Southwest US), and being in areas where there is a lot of dust in the air (sandstorms, construction sites, etc.)
7/ With clinical findings, patients can present as:
🎾community acquired PNA
🥎systemic symptoms with fever, fatigue, rash, arthralgias, erythema nodosum
⚾️eosinophilia (25-30% of cases have this finding!)
8/ Radiographic changes include
🐶acute findings (infiltrates, cavities, effusions, adenopathy, military infiltrates)
🐱chronic findings (nodules, thin-walled cavities)
➡️These nodules do not calcify! (unlike in Histo)
9/ The presence of Cocci Ab depend upon the host to mount an Ab response & exposure time
The response may be dampened in the immunocompromised
Repeat testing may not help in the immunosuppressed, but it may help if you are unclear about exposure time
13/ Negative EIA doesn't require confirmation, but serial testing may be needed because testing may have occurred prior to seroconversion (as we said before)
There’s controversy about isolated EIA IgM being a false + or a marker of early disease that needs confirmation
14/ To review, we need to send the serologies in the context of a compatible clinical presentation. The figure here can help you interpret the positive and negative EIA IgM and IgG and when to send confirmatory tests!
50F w/ EtOH cirrhosis & DM presents to ED w/ AMS & decreased UOP. She is febrile & hypotensive
She is started on vasopressors & CVVHD via central lines in the ICU
Due to concern for SBP, she is started on ceftriaxone
2/ Initial blood & ascites cultures show no growth. She remains critically ill for 7 days and still having fevers
In addition to blood cultures, which of the following is the next best test to order?
1/13
Answer: Serum BDG
You have suspicion for invasive candidiasis given the RF of cirrhosis, critical illness in ICU w/ central lines, dialysis, & broad-spectrum antibiotics (see other RF in table)
60M w/ asthma from China presents w/ SOB secondary to an asthma exacerbation. He has never smoked cigarettes. A CT chest shows a 7mm right upper lobe nodule
Which of the following tests should be ordered for further evaluation of the nodule?
1/14
Answer: AFB sputum culture
Without knowing much about the patient, other than age, geographic risk, smoking status, & normal immune status, most common infectious cause of a solitary pulmonary nodule (SPN) is TB.
2/ It’s possible that the SPN may be latent TB, but we need to rule out active TB first (AFB sputum cultures x3) before considering latent TB
Fungal causes are less likely. If we want to work it up, it would be pathogen specific (e.g., Cocci Ab) & not broad antigen testing (BDG)
75F w/ lupus, HTN, recent diagnosis of HIV (viral load 30,000, CD4- 57), presents to ED in winter w/ 4 weeks of shortness of breath & cough. T 38.5C, HR 105, BP 105/80, RR 20, O2 94% on 3L. Exam is notable for crackles & rhonchi in both lungs
2/ Labs: WBC 2,600, Hb 7.5 g/dL, platelet 70,000. CXR shows diffuse opacities. You have suspicion for Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia
Which of the following is the best non-invasive test to order to help confirm the diagnosis?
1/11
Answer: Serum BDG
⭐️LDH elevation is nonspecific and can be elevated in many diffuse pulm processes
Serum GM is not helpful in diagnosing PJP since its cell wall does not contain GM
BDG is a cell wall polysaccharide present in many pathogenic fungi including P. jirovecii