6. Field trial of
three different Plasmodium vivax detecting rapid diagnostic tests with and
without evaporative cool box storage in Afghanistan
Amy FW Mikhail, Toby J Leslie,
Mohammad I Mayan, Rohullah Zekria, Nader Mohammad,
Mohammad A Hasanzai, Najibullah Safi,
Christopher JM Whitty and Mark Rowland
Abstract
Background: Accurate
parasitological diagnosis of malaria is essential for targeting treatment where
more than one species coexist. In this study, three rapid diagnostic tests
(RDTs) (AccessBio CareStart (CSPfPan), CareStart PfPv (CSPfPv) and Standard
Diagnostics Bioline (SDBPfPv)) were evaluated for their ability to detect
natural Plasmodium
vivax infections
in a basic clinic setting. The potential for locally made evaporative cooling
boxes (ECB) to protect the tests from heat damage in high summer temperatures
was also investigated.
Methods: Venous blood was
drawn from P.
vivax positive
patients in Jalalabad, Afghanistan and tested against a panel of six RDTs. The
panel comprised two of each test type; one group was stored at room temperature
and the other in an ECB. RDT results were evaluated against a consensus gold
standard based on two double-read reference slides and PCR. The sensitivity,
specificity and a measure of global performance for each test were determined
and stratified by parasitaemia level and storage condition.
Results: In total, 306
patients were recruited, of which 284 were positive for P. vivax, one for Plasmodium
malariae and
none for Plasmodium
falciparum;
21 were negative. All three RDTs were specific for malaria. The sensitivity and
global performance index for each test were as follows: CSPfPan [98.6%, 95.1%],
CSPfPv [91.9%, 90.5%] and SDBPfPv [96.5%, 82.9%], respectively. CSPfPv was 16%
less sensitive to a parasitaemia below 5,000/μL. Room temperature storage of
SDBPfPv led to a high proportion of invalid results (17%), which reduced to 10%
in the ECB. Throughout the testing period, the ECB maintained ~8°C reduction
over ambient temperatures and never exceeded 30°C.
Conclusions: Of the three RDTs,
the CSPfPan test was the most consistent and reliable, rendering it appropriate
for this P.
vivax predominant
region. The CSPfPv test proved unsuitable owing to its reduced sensitivity at a
parasitaemia below 5,000/μL (affecting 43% of study samples). Although the SDBPfPv device
was more sensitive than the CSPfPv test, its invalid rate was unacceptably
high. ECB storage reduced the proportion of invalid results for the SDBPfPv
test, but surprisingly had no impact on RDT sensitivity at low parasitaemia.
No comments:
Post a Comment