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  3. Diagnostic Performance of Conventional and Ultrasensitive Rapid Diagnostic Tests for Malaria in Febrile Outpatients in Tanzania.
 

Diagnostic Performance of Conventional and Ultrasensitive Rapid Diagnostic Tests for Malaria in Febrile Outpatients in Tanzania.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/157426
Publisher DOI
10.1093/infdis/jiy676
PubMed ID
30476111
Description
BACKGROUND

A novel ultrasensitive malaria rapid diagnostic test (us-RDT) has been developed for improved active Plasmodium falciparum infection detection. The usefulness of this us-RDT in clinical diagnosis and fever management has not been evaluated.

METHODS

Diagnostic performance of us-RDT was compared retrospectively to that of conventional RDT (co-RDT) in 3000 children and 515 adults presenting with fever to Tanzanian outpatient clinics. The parasite density was measured by an ultrasensitive qPCR (us-qPCR), and the HRP2 concentration was measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

RESULTS

us-RDT identified few additional P. falciparum-positive patients as compared to co-RDT (276 vs 265 parasite-positive patients detected), with only a marginally greater sensitivity (75% vs 73%), using us-qPCR as the gold standard (357 parasite-positive patients detected). The specificity of both RDTs was >99%. Five of 11 additional patients testing positive by us-RDT had negative results by us-qPCR. The HRP2 concentration was above the limit of detection for co-RDT (>3653 pg of HRP2 per mL of blood) in almost all infections (99% [236 of 239]) with a parasite density >100 parasites per µL of blood. At parasite densities <100 parasites/µL, the HRP2 concentration was above the limits of detection of us-RDT (>793 pg/mL) and co-RDT in 29 (25%) and 24 (20%) of 118 patients, respectively.

CONCLUSION

There is neither an advantage nor a risk of using us-RDT, rather than co-RDT, for clinical malaria diagnosis. In febrile patients, only a small proportion of infections are characterized by a parasite density or an HRP2 concentration in the range where use of us-RDT would confer a meaningful advantage over co-RDT.
Date of Publication
2019-04-16
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
HRP2 Malaria PCR RDT Tanzania diagnosis fever quantitative ultrasensitive
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Hofmann, Natalie E
Antunes Moniz, Clara
Holzschuh, Aurel
Keitel, Kristina
Notfallzentrum für Kinder und Jugendliche
Boillat-Blanco, Noémie
Kagoro, Frank
Samaka, Josephine
Mbarack, Zainab
Ding, Xavier C
González, Iveth J
Genton, Blaise
D'Acremont, Valérie
Felger, Ingrid
Additional Credits
Notfallzentrum für Kinder und Jugendliche
Series
The journal of infectious diseases
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISSN
1537-6613
Access(Rights)
open.access
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