Serum Antibody Signature Directed
against <i>Candida albicans</i> Hsp90 and Enolase Detects
Invasive Candidiasis
in Non-Neutropenic Patients
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Abstract
Invasive candidiasis (IC) adds significantly
to the morbidity and
mortality of non-neutropenic patients if not diagnosed and treated
early. To uncover serologic biomarkers that alone or in combination
could reliably detect IC in this population, IgG antibody–reactivity
profiles to the <i>Candida albicans</i> intracellular proteome
were examined by serological proteome analysis (SERPA) and data mining
procedures in a training set of 24 non-neutropenic patients. Despite
the high interindividual molecular heterogeneity, unsupervised clustering
analyses revealed that serum 22-IgG antibody–reactivity patterns
differentiated IC from non-IC patients. Univariate analyses further
highlighted that 15 out of the 22 SERPA-identified IgG antibodies
could be useful candidate IC biomarkers. The diagnostic performance
of one of these candidates (anti-Hsp90 IgG antibodies) was validated
using an ELISA prototype in a test set of 59 non-neutropenic patients.
We then formulated an IC discriminator based on the combined immunoproteomic
fingerprints of this and another SERPA-detected and previously validated
IC biomarker (anti-Eno1 IgG antibodies) in the training set. Its consistency
was substantiated using their ELISA prototypes in the test set. Receiver-operating-characteristic
curve analyses showed that this two-biomarker signature accurately
identified IC in non-neutropenic patients and provided better IC diagnostic
accuracy than the individual biomarkers alone. We conclude that this
serum IgG antibody signature directed against <i>C. albicans</i> Hsp90 and Eno1, if confirmed prospectively, may be useful for IC
diagnosis in non-neutropenic patients