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Grand RoundsWeekly Evidence Brief

Infectious Diseases

Edition

30-Second Takeaway

  • Rapid phenotypic AST for gram-negative bacteremia advanced de-escalation but did not improve 30-day clinical outcomes vs standard AST.
  • Antifungal treatment for COVID-19–associated pulmonary aspergillosis was strongly associated with lower 60-day mortality in European ICUs.
  • Antigen-based SARS-CoV-2 self-testing improves case detection with acceptable accuracy and supports continuity of daily activities.

Week ending April 25, 2026

Rapid diagnostics, targeted therapy, and prevention gaps: aligning ID practice with what actually changes outcomes

Rapid AST for gram-negative bacteremia did not improve 30-day global outcomes

JAMAApr 19, 2026

In this 7-center randomized trial of 850 patients with gram-negative bacteremia, rapid phenotypic AST plus standard testing did not improve DOOR at day 30. The probability of a more favorable DOOR with rapid testing was 48.8% (95% CI, 45.3%-52.4%), below the predefined superiority threshold. Median time to effective therapy within 3 days was similar between groups, despite faster susceptibility reporting. Rapid AST accelerated antibiotic escalation or de-escalation by about 14 hours, without differences in mortality, ICU use, or length of stay.

Antifungal therapy lowered 60-day mortality in COVID-19–associated pulmonary aspergillosis

CHESTApr 20, 2026

This European multicenter cohort included 259 ICU patients with probable or proven COVID-19–associated pulmonary aspergillosis. Most patients (91.5%) received antifungal therapy, predominantly azoles, with baseline characteristics similar between treated and untreated groups. Antifungal treatment was associated with substantially lower 60-day mortality (HR 0.31, 95% CI 0.17-0.59); weighted analysis showed HR 0.28 (95% CI 0.13-0.58). Older age, immunosuppressive treatment, and remdesivir administration were independently associated with higher mortality, whereas male sex was protective.

SARS-CoV-2 antigen self-testing improved case detection with acceptable accuracy and strong uptake

ECLINICALMEDICINEApr 20, 2026

This systematic review and meta-analysis included 61 studies (87 datasets) with over 25 million participants using commercial SARS-CoV-2 antigen self-tests. Self-testing detected 31 cases per 1000 individuals, missing an estimated 14% compared with molecular testing. Overall test positivity was 7 per 1000, and false positives occurred in 0.4% of tests, indicating good specificity in most settings. Number needed to test was 75 for symptomatic and 1002 for asymptomatic individuals, underscoring reduced efficiency in low-prevalence screening.

Stopping CMV antivirals at <200 IU/mL safely shortened therapy after kidney transplant

TRANSPLANTATIONApr 18, 2026

This retrospective cohort of 1048 CMV IgG–positive kidney recipients compared two DNAemia thresholds for ending preemptive antiviral therapy. Using a higher discontinuation threshold (<200 IU/mL) shortened time to treatment withdrawal (23 vs 27 days; P<0.001) compared with requiring undetectable DNAemia. CMV recurrence and disease rates were similar between periods (12.2% vs 10.8%), as were refractory CMV, acute rejection, and graft function. Recurrences occurred slightly earlier with the higher threshold, but only older donor age and earlier CMV onset predicted recurrence.

References

Numbered in order of appearance. Click any reference to view details.

Additional Reads

Optional additional studies from this edition.

Edition context

Clinical signal

  • Rapid diagnostics do not guarantee outcome gains; marginal benefit may be small where stewardship and early effective therapy are already strong.
  • Antifungal and novel antibacterial agents can be effective in fragile hosts, but access, resistance, and timing remain central concerns.
  • Population tools such as self-testing and maternal vaccination can substantially mitigate COVID-19 burden when implemented and timed appropriately.