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Is bronchoscopic view a reliable method in diagnosis of tracheobronchial aspergillosis in critically ill non‐neutropenic patients?
Author(s) -
Youssif Sahar Farghly,
Hassan Elham Ahmed,
Moharram Ahmed Mohamed,
Farhan Mohammed Ameen,
Badary Dalia M.,
Hasan Ali Adel Azeem
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the clinical respiratory journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.789
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1752-699X
pISSN - 1752-6981
DOI - 10.1111/crj.13229
Subject(s) - medicine , bronchoscopy , bronchoalveolar lavage , critically ill , aspergillosis , neutropenia , intensive care unit , radiology , intensive care medicine , lung , chemotherapy , immunology
Pulmonary aspergillosis is the main respiratory fungal infection however; its diagnosis is missed or delayed in critically ill non‐neutropenic patients. Despite the utility of fiberoptic bronchoscopy for the evaluation of tracheobronchial aspergillosis (TBA) in immunocompromised patients has been extensively studied, however its utility in critically ill non‐neutropenic patients is underestimated. Objectives To assess the bronchoscopic changes suspected TBA relative to the microbiological and histopathological aspects in critically ill non‐neutropenic patients admitted to respiratory intensive care unit (RICU). Methods We prospectively studied 139 critically ill non‐neutropenic patients admitted to RICU and had a clinical suspicion of broncho‐pulmonary Aspergillus infection. Those patients were subjected to clinical and bronchoscopic assessment for the evaluation of suspected TBA. Microbiological culture of bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and histopathological examination of tracheobronchial biopsies were done. Results Bronchoscopic changes suspected TBA were found in 48.2% of patients (67/139), where Aspergillus infection was confirmed microbiologically in 59.7% (40/67) and histopathologically in 56.7% (38/67). Of these changes, whitish plaques ± ulcers, pseudomembrane and/or sticky secretion with hyperemic mucosa were detected in 68.7%, 26.9% and 16.4% respectively. These changes were mostly seen in the main bronchi (54/67; 80.6%). The sensitivity, specificity, positive, negative predictive values and overall accuracy of these bronchoscopic changes as compared with BAL fluid results were 83.3%, 70.3%, 53.2%, 91.2% and 74.1% respectively. Conclusions Bronchoscopy could be a reliable procedure for TBA diagnosis in critically ill non‐neutropenic patients. Whitish plaques ± ulcers were the prominent bronchoscopic changes with reasonable diagnostic accuracy for prediction of TBA.

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