Abstract
Predictors of mortality in chronic pulmonary aspergillosis http://ow.ly/CUyT307S4LL
Chronic pulmonary aspergillosis (CPA) is a severe fungal infection usually seen in immunocompetent patients with underlying respiratory disorders [1]. Estimates suggest that ∼3 million people suffer from CPA globally [2]. The precise prevalence is unknown. Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) seems to be the most relevant driver for the global burden of CPA with estimates suggesting about 1.2 million patients with CPA as a sequel to TB [3]. Given that there were 10.4 million new TB cases in 2015, CPA represents a serious sequela to pulmonary TB [4]. However, any search for CPA in the Global Tuberculosis Report of the World Health Organization (WHO) is still in vain [4]. The relative frequency of CPA after standard antituberculous treatment is estimated to be 17% after 12 months and increases to 22% after 48 months. This data, however, is based on two historic UK studies from 1968 and 1970 in which fungal evidence was confirmed by Aspergillus precipitins (59% sensitivity, 100% specificity) and radiological features considered only aspergilloma [3, 5, 6]. Thus, the frequency of CPA might even be higher, when using Aspergillus-specific IgG antibody assays, which are superior to Aspergillus precipitins with a sensitivity of up to 96% and a specificity of 98%, and when radiological criteria consider all CPA entities, especially chronic cavitary pulmonary aspergillosis (CCPA) [7]. Follow-up visits of TB patients, especially those with cavitary TB, should always include a diagnostic work-up for CPA. Whether CPA plays even a larger role in multidrug-resistant (MDR) and extensively drug-resistant (XDR)-TB patients is entirely unknown. MDR/XDR-TB patients experience a more progressive destruction of the lung and global rates of MDR/XDR-TB are increasing considerably [4, 8].
Diagnosis of CPA is often challenging and made late. There is no solitary test or biomarker that allows a definite diagnosis without considering other parameters. Diagnosis of CPA should rather be based upon a combination of characteristics. In 2016, the European Society for Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) in cooperation with the European Respiratory Society (ERS) and the European Confederation of Medical Mycology (ECMM) published guidelines for the diagnosis and management of CPA [9]. Diagnostic criteria include one or more cavities with or without a fungal ball present or nodules on thoracic imaging, direct evidence of Aspergillus infection or an immunological response to Aspergillus spp., and exclusion of alternative diagnosis, all present for at least 3 months. In the same year the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) also published diagnostic criteria for CPA [10], but the IDSA criteria refer only to CCPA and differ significantly in some points, which may lead to deviating conclusions with corresponding therapeutic implications [11]. Both guidelines, however, strengthen the use of Aspergillus-specific IgG assays to provide mycological evidence.
CPA infection results in a slow and progressive destruction of the lung with high rates of morbidity and mortality. Few studies have reported data on the outcome of CPA. Most of them indicate a 5-year survival rate between 48% and 62% [12–17]. Two studies even report a 5-year survival rate of less than 20% [18, 19]. Higher survival rates may be achieved in patients with a more localised pulmonary disease including patients with a single aspergilloma rendering surgical resection an option [20]. However, all of these studies had a retrospective study design and were conducted in high-income countries, and the vast majority of CPA patients analysed received adequate antifungal treatment.
In this issue of the European Respiratory Journal, Lowes et al. [21] present predictors of mortality in a cohort of 387 CPA patients referred to the UK's National Aspergillosis Centre for medical management of CPA between 1992 and 2012. This is a retrospective data analysis of the largest CPA patient cohort described to date, integrating objective as well as subjective variables to assess predictors of mortality. Furthermore, CPA diagnosis was consistent with the diagnostic criteria of the recently published European guideline on CPA, designating a well-defined and comprehensible patient cohort [9].
Lowes et al. [21] report 1-, 5- and 10-year survival rates of 86%, 62% and 47%, which is in line with previously published data, except for one study from Japan which reported a 5-year survival rate of just 17.5% [18]. The reasons were not discussed by those authors, but might be explained by a significantly higher age of CPA patients (75.1±11.3 years) and by the distribution of underlying pulmonary conditions with a higher number of patients with TB (50%) and nontuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) infection (35.7%). Both higher age (HR 1.053 (1.03–1.07)·year−1 increase, p<0.001) and NTM infection (HR 2.07 (1.22–3.52), p<0.001) were significantly associated with an increased mortality in the study by Lowes et al. [21]. Previous studies have shown that 4–17% of NTM patients develop CPA, especially those with a cavitary type of NTM pulmonary disease [22–24]. A recent study from Nagasaki, Japan directly compared the outcome of NTM patients without CPA (n=82) to NTM patients coinfected with CPA (n=9), and to CPA patients without NTM infection (n=41) [16]. Although the number of NTM patients coinfected with CPA was limited, the study indicates that CPA coinfection predicts the outcome in NTM patients. The authors suggested giving priority to the treatment of CPA. This is now supported by the study of Lowes et al. [21], which showed that NTM patients coinfected with CPA had a significantly poorer outcome with a 2-year survival rate of 62% compared to 81% without CPA. The outcome was even worse when compared to CPA patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which, after NTM, was the second underlying respiratory disorder to reach statistical significance by multivariate analysis (HR 1.57 (1.05–2.36), p=0.029). Interestingly, TB infection was not identified as a predictor of mortality, which contrasts the Nagasaki study [16]. More information on the TB patient cohort would be useful to interpret these findings as TB patients differ significantly in disease severity, ranging from pulmonary restitutio ad integrum to severe destruction of the lung with persistent cavities and loss of functional capacity. Other independent predictors of mortality that reached statistical significance by multivariate analysis were a lower albumin count (HR 0.92 (0.87–0.96)·g−1·L−1, p<0.001), and lower activity (HR 1.021 (1.01–1.03) per point increase in St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire Activity Domain, p<0.001). Pleural involvement, bilateral cavitary disease or aspergilloma was also associated with worsening 2-year survival rates.
Almost all patients analysed in detail (98% of 108 patients) received antifungal treatment and 81% of these received treatment for at least 1 year (77% itraconazole, 15.2% voriconazole, 7.6% posaconazole). Positive sputum cultures for Aspergillus were obtained in 48 (12%) patients. 19% of isolates were pan-azole resistant, while the other isolates showed a reduced susceptibility to at least one azole. CPA patients with a susceptible Aspergillus isolate had a better outcome than those with a resistant or intermediate Aspergillus isolate, but comparison did not reveal statistical significance. In times of highly recommended Aspergillus-specific IgG antibody testing to establish CPA diagnosis, the direct evidence of Aspergillus for susceptibility testing is still compulsory and should be commonly implemented in disease management. Data regarding the cause of death are limited and were available in 40 (10%) patients. In 67.5% CPA was listed as either direct cause of death or at least contributing to death. However, most patients died at other centres and the cause of death is commonly difficult to interpret in retrospective data analysis.
In conclusion, Lowes et al. [21] report several factors that influence the outcome of CPA including NTM infection, COPD, higher age, lower albumin, lower activity and the level of pulmonary involvement in the largest CPA patient cohort described to date. These findings may be used to identify patients at increased risk for a more progressive course of CPA at an early stage of disease and may help to improve disease management and outcome.
The study contributes to a better understanding of factors that influence the outcome of CPA. However, data on CPA in low- and middle-income countries is scarce. Lack of diagnostic resources and limited treatment options will have to be taken into account. A recent survey on global access to antifungal therapy showed that at least 78 million people have no access to itraconazole [25]. Although it is a most needed drug for the fight against CPA, itraconazole is not yet listed by the WHO as an essential medication [26]. Between countries where itraconazole is available, the price varies remarkably ranging from US$1 to US$102. Other effective drugs for CPA such as voriconazole, posaconazole or micafungin are probably unaffordable for most CPA patients and healthcare systems [25]. Recently, the Global Fungal Infection Forum 2 was held in Liverpool, UK with the aim to develop an operational definition of CPA for future epidemiological research and clinical care in low- and middle-income countries. CPA plays a central role in the agenda of the Global Action Fund for Fungal Infections (GAFFI) (www.gaffi.org), with the overall goal of ensuring that 95% of people with serious fungal diseases are diagnosed and 95% are treated by 2025 [27].
Growing awareness led to the development of the new ESCMID/ERS/ECMM guideline on diagnosis and management of CPA [9]. The diagnostic criteria offer consistent CPA diagnosis for the first time. This momentum calls for the implementation of an international CPA registry to collect data on the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, diagnostic methods, disease management and outcome of CPA as done e.g. for rare invasive fungal diseases by FungiScope™ (NCT01731353; www.fungiscope.net). Furthermore, there is an urgent need for multicentre prospective studies in all fields of CPA, which could be supported for example on the platform of a research network to promote clinical research similar to the TBnet collaboration on mycobacterial infections (www.tb-net.org).
CPA is an under-rated disease of global health dimensions and further commitment is needed to tackle this neglected fungal infection.
Disclosures
Supplementary Material
Cornely ERJ-02520-2016_Cornely
Footnotes
Conflict of interest: Disclosures can be found alongside this article at erj.ersjournals.com
- Received December 22, 2016.
- Accepted December 22, 2016.
- Copyright ©ERS 2017