BACKGROUND: Because of the multifaceted clinical presentation of Buruli ulcer disease, misclassification of clinically diagnosed cases may occur frequently. Laboratory tests for the confirmation of suspected cases include microscopic examination, culture, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and histopathologic examination. However, microscopic examination, the only test usually available in areas of endemicity, has a low sensitivity. METHODS: To make a highly sensitive diagnostic method locally available, dry reagent-based PCR (DRB-PCR), which is well adapted to tropical conditions, was pilot-tested in Ghana. Subsequently, the assay was used for the routine diagnosis of Buruli ulcer disease over a period of 2 years. The method was compared with other diagnostic tests to evaluate its performance under field conditions. RESULTS: The interassay agreement rate between DRB-PCR and standard PCR was 91.7% for swab specimens and 95% for tissue specimens. Among all of the locally available tests, DRB-PCR revealed the highest overall positivity ratio. Sixty percent of patients with clinical diagnoses of Buruli ulcer disease had the diagnoses confirmed by DRB-PCR of swab or tissue specimens, compared with 30%-40% of patients who had diagnoses confirmed by microscopic examination of swab or tissue specimens. The positivity ratio of DRB-PCR varied considerably when analyzed per treatment center. Standardization of specimen collection resulted in a 30% increase in the positivity ratio of the assay, compared with that in the pilot-testing phase. CONCLUSIONS: DRB-PCR is a reliable tool for the diagnosis of Buruli ulcer disease. However, PCR assays are suitable for detection only during early stages of the disease, when samples still contain bacilli. The quality of clinical diagnosis and the quality of diagnostic specimens strongly influence the positivity ratio.
BACKGROUND: Because of the multifaceted clinical presentation of Buruli ulcer disease, misclassification of clinically diagnosed cases may occur frequently. Laboratory tests for the confirmation of suspected cases include microscopic examination, culture, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and histopathologic examination. However, microscopic examination, the only test usually available in areas of endemicity, has a low sensitivity. METHODS: To make a highly sensitive diagnostic method locally available, dry reagent-based PCR (DRB-PCR), which is well adapted to tropical conditions, was pilot-tested in Ghana. Subsequently, the assay was used for the routine diagnosis of Buruli ulcer disease over a period of 2 years. The method was compared with other diagnostic tests to evaluate its performance under field conditions. RESULTS: The interassay agreement rate between DRB-PCR and standard PCR was 91.7% for swab specimens and 95% for tissue specimens. Among all of the locally available tests, DRB-PCR revealed the highest overall positivity ratio. Sixty percent of patients with clinical diagnoses of Buruli ulcer disease had the diagnoses confirmed by DRB-PCR of swab or tissue specimens, compared with 30%-40% of patients who had diagnoses confirmed by microscopic examination of swab or tissue specimens. The positivity ratio of DRB-PCR varied considerably when analyzed per treatment center. Standardization of specimen collection resulted in a 30% increase in the positivity ratio of the assay, compared with that in the pilot-testing phase. CONCLUSIONS: DRB-PCR is a reliable tool for the diagnosis of Buruli ulcer disease. However, PCR assays are suitable for detection only during early stages of the disease, when samples still contain bacilli. The quality of clinical diagnosis and the quality of diagnostic specimens strongly influence the positivity ratio.
Authors: Marcus Beissner; Nana-Yaa Awua-Boateng; William Thompson; Willemien A Nienhuis; Erasmus Klutse; Pius Agbenorku; Joerg Nitschke; Karl-Heinz Herbinger; Vera Siegmund; Erna Fleischmann; Ohene Adjei; Bernhard Fleischer; Tjip S van der Werf; Thomas Loscher; Gisela Bretzel Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg Date: 2010-11 Impact factor: 2.345
Authors: Miriam Eddyani; Alexandra G Fraga; Fernando Schmitt; Cécile Uwizeye; Krista Fissette; Christian Johnson; Julia Aguiar; Ghislain Sopoh; Yves Barogui; Wayne M Meyers; Jorge Pedrosa; Françoise Portaels Journal: J Clin Microbiol Date: 2009-04-22 Impact factor: 5.948
Authors: Mavinga D Phanzu; Aombe E Bafende; Bofunga B D Imposo; Wayne M Meyers; Françoise Portaels Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg Date: 2010-03 Impact factor: 2.345
Authors: K-H Herbinger; D Brieske; J Nitschke; V Siegmund; W Thompson; E Klutse; N Y Awua-Boateng; E Bruhl; L Kunaa; M Schunk; O Adjei; T Löscher; G Bretzel Journal: Infection Date: 2008-12-03 Impact factor: 3.553