🧫 1,3-β-D-Glucan (BDG) Test


1. What Is 1,3-β-D-Glucan (BDG)?

1,3-β-D-Glucan is a polysaccharide component of the fungal cell wall.
It is mainly detected in:

  • Candida spp.
  • Aspergillus spp.
  • Pneumocystis jirovecii
  • Most other pathogenic fungi

Note:

  • Cryptococcus and Zygomycetes (Mucor, Rhizopus) have minimal β-D-Glucan → often not detected by this test.
  • Blood BDG elevation suggests invasive fungal infection (IFI).

2. Purpose of BDG Testing

  • Early diagnosis of IFI
    • Can suggest infection even if blood cultures are negative
    • Useful in candidemia, invasive aspergillosis, PJP
  • Monitoring immunocompromised patients
    • Hematopoietic stem cell transplant
    • Chemotherapy
    • Solid organ transplant
    • Long-term steroids or immunosuppressants
  • Adjunctive monitoring of antifungal therapy

3. Test Method — Colorimetric Assay

How It Works

  1. Patient serum reacts with BDG reagent
  2. Fungal cell wall component triggers a chemical color change
  3. Optical measurement quantifies BDG levels

Specimen

  • Serum (no anticoagulants)
  • Antifungal therapy does not prevent testing

4. Reference Ranges (Typical)

ResultInterpretation
< 60 pg/mLNegative
60–79.9 pg/mLIndeterminate / Borderline
≥ 80 pg/mLPositive — suggests invasive fungal infection

Cut-off may vary depending on lab and assay kit.


5. Clinical Significance

Positive (≥ 80 pg/mL)

  • Invasive Candida infections
  • Invasive Aspergillus infections
  • Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP)
  • Useful when respiratory specimens are difficult to obtain in immunocompromised patients

Borderline (60–79.9 pg/mL)

  • Early infection or low fungal burden
  • Reduced immune response may cause borderline values
  • Requires additional diagnostics:
    • CT imaging
    • Blood cultures
    • Galactomannan
    • Other fungal markers

Negative (< 60 pg/mL)

  • IFI less likely
  • Does not rule out Cryptococcus or Mucor infections

6. Interpretation Considerations

⚠️ 1) False Positives

BDG may elevate due to:

  • Cellulose filters in hemodialysis
  • Albumin or IVIG infusion
  • Massive transfusions
  • Certain β-lactam antibiotics
  • Contaminated blood culture bottles
  • Severe bacterial sepsis

→ Always interpret alongside clinical presentation, imaging, and other fungal markers.

⚠️ 2) Cryptococcus & Zygomycetes

  • Rarely detected by BDG due to cell wall composition
  • Alternative tests: Cryptococcal antigen, Mucor PCR

⚠️ 3) During Antifungal Therapy

  • BDG may remain elevated days to weeks after therapy starts
  • Single measurements should not solely guide treatment

⚠️ 4) BDG is Adjunctive

  • Diagnosis requires clinical context plus:
    • Imaging (CT/MRI)
    • Blood cultures
    • Galactomannan or PCR
    • Histopathology when available

7. Summary

ItemKey Points
Test Name1,3-β-D-Glucan (BDG)
MethodColorimetric Assay
Reference< 60 Negative / ≥ 80 Positive
Clinical UseDetects most invasive fungal infections (Candida, Aspergillus, PJP)
LimitationsFalse positives common; Cryptococcus/Mucor not detected
SpecimenSerum

8. References

  • Tietz Textbook of Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, 6th ed.
  • Pappas PG et al. Clinical Practice Guideline for the Management of Candidiasis (IDSA)
  • Koo S, Keil SD et al. β-D-Glucan Testing in Invasive Fungal Infections
  • CLSI guidelines for fungal diagnostics
  • Henry’s Clinical Diagnosis and Management by Laboratory Methods, 24th ed.

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