| Literature DB >> 20974009 |
Anne Laurent1, Joanna Schellenberg, Kizito Shirima, Sosthenes C Ketende, Pedro L Alonso, Hassan Mshinda, Marcel Tanner, David Schellenberg.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) has been widely advocated to improve Plasmodium falciparum diagnosis, especially in settings where quality microscopy is not available. RDTs based on the detection of histidine-rich protein 2 (HRP-2) can remain positive for several weeks after an infection is cured, due to the persistence of HRP-2 antigens. As a result, test specificity may vary between age groups with different prevalence of P. falciparum infection.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20974009 PMCID: PMC2974751 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Studies of HRP-2 performance compared to microscopy, in P. falciparum endemic areas.
| Beadle [ | Kenya | Children aged 9 to 14 years | Hyperendemic (86%) | 87% | 88% |
| Swathout[ | Democratic Republic of Congo | Symptomatic children aged 6-59 months | Highly endemic and seasonal | 100% | 52% |
| Huong [ | Vietnam | Symptomatic and control individuals aged 4-60 years | Hyperendemic | 96% | 100% |
| Guthmann [ | Uganda | Symptomatic individuals | Hyperendemic (57%) | 97% | 88% |
| Williams [ | Tanzania | Symptomatic individuals of all age | Hyperendemic (32%) | 94% | 89% |
| Shiff [ | Tanzania | na | Holoendemic | 89% | 88% |
na = not applicable
Studies comparing HRP-2 performance between areas of different P. falciparum endemicity, using microscopy as a "gold standard".
| Mharakurwa [ | Zimbabwe | 10% (hypoendemic) | 91% | 92% |
| 40% (hyperendemic) | 95% | 85% | ||
| 59% (mesoendemic) | 93% | 72% | ||
| Hopkins [ | Uganda | 4% (hypoendemic) | na | 98% |
| 33 to 85% (hyperendemic) | na | 55% | ||
| Mboera [ | Tanzania | 4% (unstable, prone to outbreaks) | 92% | 99% |
| 14% (unstable, prone to outbreaks) | 97% | 97% | ||
| 22% (unstable, prone to outbreaks) | 84% | 91% | ||
| 49% (unstable, prone to outbreaks) | 98% | 90% | ||
| 46% (perennial) | 81% | 95% | ||
| Abeku [ | Tanzania | 1% (hypoendemic) | 90% | 100% |
| 49% (mesoendemic) | 91% | 65% | ||
na = not applicable
Note: The studies examined different volumes of blood before declaring a slide negative: studies [26,12] examined 100 fields and study [9] 200 fields before declaring a slide negative; study [22] declared slides negative if no parasite was seen by the time 400 white blood cells counted.
Plasmodium falciparum infection prevalence by baseline characteristics, according to blood smear microscopic examination and HRP-2 test.
| Microscopy | Rapid diagnostic test | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No of observations | Prevalence (%) | 95% CI | P-value (†) | Prevalence (%) | 95% CI | P-value (†) | |
| 0.18 | 0.54 | ||||||
| Female | 320 | 31.3 | [23.3-40.5] | 56.3 | [46.2-65.8] | ||
| Male | 278 | 37.8 | [28.2-48.5] | 58.1 | [44.0-71.3] | ||
| 0.40 | 0.93 | ||||||
| TAN Litehu | 303 | 31.7 | [20.4-45.7] | 56.8 | [37.0-74.6] | ||
| TAN Namikupa | 295 | 37.0 | [30.9-43.5] | 57.6 | [46.6-67.9] | ||
| 0.029 | < 0.001 | ||||||
| Mkoreha | 97 | 42.3 | [32.3-52.3] | 67.0 | [57.5-76.5] | ||
| Lyenje | 109 | 38.5 | [29.2-47.8] | 70.6 | [62.0-79.3] | ||
| Mihambwe | 106 | 35.8 | [26.6-45.1] | 54.7 | [45.1-64.4] | ||
| Chaume | 99 | 35.4 | [25.8-44.9] | 56.6 | [46.6-66.5] | ||
| Kitama | 92 | 32.6 | [22.8-42.4] | 51.1 | [40.7-61.5] | ||
| Mkonjowano | 95 | 20.0 | [11.8-28.2] | 41.1 | [31.0-51.1] | ||
| <0.001 | <0.001 | ||||||
| 0 to 4 years | 104 | 63.5 | [49.4-75.5] | 76.9 | [64.1-86.2] | ||
| 5 to 9 years | 73 | 72.6 | [54.2-85.6] | 91.8 | [82.3-96.4] | ||
| 10 to 24 years | 138 | 39.1 | [26.8-53.1] | 73.2 | [54.3-86.2] | ||
| >= 25 years | 283 | 11.3 | [7.8-16.1] | 33.2 | [24.0-44.0] | ||
(†) Fisher's exact test
Figure 1Sample age distribution and malaria prevalence by 5-year age groups. Number of individuals in each 5-year age group (blue columns). Malaria prevalence according to microscopy in each 5-year age group (black line).
Figure 2HRP-2 test performance by 5-year age group. HRP-2 test sensitivity (black circles), specificity (red squares), positive predictive value (orange triangles) and negative predictive value (green diamonds) by 5-year age group. Malaria prevalence according to microscopy (blue bars).
HRP-2 test sensitivity by category of parasite density
| No of parasites/μL | No of observation | Sensitivity | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| <500 | 81 | 92.6% | [78.0-97.8] |
| 500-4999 | 74 | 100% | - |
| >5000 | 50 | 96.0% | [81.7-99.2] |
P value (Fisher's exact test) 0.13
Mean parasite density by age group among individuals with a positive blood slide
| Parasite density | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age category (years) | No of observation | Parasites/μL(*) | 95% CI |
| 0-4 | 66 | 3222 | [2196-4726] |
| 5-9 | 53 | 1349 | [864-2106] |
| 10-24 | 54 | 512 | [372-706] |
| 25-+ | 32 | 335 | [206-547] |
| Total | 205 | 1118 | [887-1408] |
P value (Anova test) < 0.001
(*) Geometric means of parasites density in positive slides