Seventeen laboratories participated in a study of interlaboratory reproducibility with caspofungin microdilution susceptibility testing against panels comprising 30 isolates of Candida spp. and 20 isolates of Aspergillus spp. The laboratories used materials supplied from a single source to determine the influence of growth medium (RPMI 1640 with or without glucose additions and antibiotic medium 3 [AM3]), the same incubation times (24 h and 48 h), and the same end point definition (partial or complete inhibition of growth) for the MIC of caspofungin. All tests were run in duplicate, and end points were determined both spectrophotometrically and visually. The results from almost all of the laboratories for quality control and reference Candida and Aspergillus isolates tested with fluconazole and itraconazole matched the NCCLS published values. However, considerable interlaboratory variability was seen in the results of the caspofungin tests. For Candida spp. the most consistent MIC data were generated with visual "prominent growth reduction" (MIC 2 ) end points measured at 24 h in RPMI 1640, where 73.3% of results for the 30 isolates tested fell within a mode ؎ one dilution range across all 17 laboratories. MIC 2 at 24 h in RPMI 1640 or AM3 also gave the best interlaboratory separation of Candida isolates of known high and low susceptibility to caspofungin. Reproducibility of MIC data was problematic for caspofungin tests with Aspergillus spp. under all conditions, but the minimal effective concentration end point, defined as the lowest caspofungin concentration yielding conspicuously aberrant hyphal growth, gave excellent reproducibility for data from 14 of the 17 participating laboratories.
Although there is a presumed drug-drug interaction between itraconazole and nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors, the medical literature lacks such documentation. We describe a drug-drug interaction between itraconazole and efavirenz in a patient with disseminated histoplasmosis and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The drug combination resulted in persistently elevated urinary Histoplasma antigen levels and subtherapeutic plasma itraconazole concentrations. Changing treatment from efavirenz to a protease inhibitor was accompanied by improvements in the desired urinary Histoplasma antigen level and plasma itraconazole concentration.
This study demonstrated that 6 different methods of calculating adherence from pharmacy records yielded adherence rates of 28.1% to 56.2%. Studies using pharmacy records should specify how adherence is calculated.
Eosinophilia is not an infrequent occurrence among ART-naïve HIV-infected patients. Patients with eosinophilia are more likely than patients without eosinophilia to present with a skin rash. HIV RNA viral suppression did not necessarily result in the resolution of eosinophilia. Extensive workup for eosinophilia may not be necessary in most cases.
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