Comparison of different blood compartments for the detection of circulating DNA using a rat model of Pneumocystis pneumonia

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Abstract

Pneumocystis is mostly found in the alveolar spaces, but circulation of viable organisms also occurs and suggests that the detection of DNA in blood could be used as a noninvasive procedure to improve the diagnosis of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PcP). In order to determine the optimal compartment for Pneumocystis DNA detection, we used a rat model of PcP and tested the presence of Pneumocystis with a quantitative mtLSU targeting real-time PCR in four blood compartments: whole blood, clot, serum and Platelet-Rich-Plasma (PRP). All samples from 4 Pneumocystis-free control rats were negative. Pneumocystis was detected in 79, 64, 57, and 57% of samples from 14 PcP rats, respectively, but DNA release was not related to pulmonary loads. These data confirm the potential usefulness of Pneumocystis DNA detection in the blood for PcP diagnosis and suggest that whole blood could be the most appropriate compartment for Pneumocystis detection.

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Fréalle, E., Gantois, N., Aliouat-Denis, C. M., Leroy, S., Zawadzki, C., Perkhofer, S., … Dei-Cas, E. (2015). Comparison of different blood compartments for the detection of circulating DNA using a rat model of Pneumocystis pneumonia. Medical Mycology, 53(7), 754–759. https://doi.org/10.1093/mmy/myv050

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