Diagnostic Performance and Safety of Bronchoalveolar Lavage in Thrombocytopenic Haematological Patients for Invasive Fungal Infections Diagnosis: A Monocentric, Retrospective Experience

Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis. 2019 Nov 1;11(1):e2019065. doi: 10.4084/MJHID.2019.065. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Background: Although bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) measurements of galactomannan antigen (GM) seems to be more sensitive than serum testing to detect invasive fungal infection (IFI), a consensus on the most appropriate diagnostic threshold of the BAL GM test is still unclear. Moreover, there is uncertainty as to whether BAL is a safe procedure in patients with hematological malignancies (HM) and thrombocytopenia.

Objectives: Based on this background, 102 adult patients with HM and associated thrombocytopenia were retrospectively analyzed with the dual aim of 1) determining whether BAL is a safe and feasible procedure; and, 2) identifying the most appropriate threshold for GM positivity in the diagnosis of IFI.

Patients/methods: each BAL was considered as one case/patient. One hundred twelve BALs were carried out in 102 HM patients: at the time of the BAL, the median platelet count (PLTs) in all patients was 47×109/L (1-476), and 31 patients (27%) had PLTs< 20×109/L.

Results: complications from the BAL were infrequent (3.5%) and mild. No bleeding was reported. The BAL GM cut off of >0.8 was associated with the best diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity 72.97% and specificity 80%). Antifungal treatment of patients with BAL GM >0.8 resulted in a clinical-radiological improvement in 35/41 patients (85%).

Conclusions: BAL was a safe procedure also in thrombocytopenic patients, permitting an IFI diagnosis not otherwise identifiable using EORTC/MSG criteria. Our data suggest that a BAL GM value of>0.8 represents the most useful cut-off in terms of sensibility and specificity. Further prospective studies on a more significant number of patients are needed to confirm these results.

Keywords: Bronchoalveolar lavage; Galactomannan antigen; Hematologic malignancies; Pulmonary aspergillosis; Thrombocytopenia.