| Literature DB >> 23339198 |
Daniel G Colley, Sue Binder, Carl Campbell, Charles H King, Louis-Albert Tchuem Tchuenté, Eliézer K N'Goran, Berhanu Erko, Diana M S Karanja, Narcis B Kabatereine, Lisette van Lieshout, Stephen Rathbun.
Abstract
We evaluated a commercial point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen (POC-CCA) test for assessing Schistosoma mansoni infection prevalence in areas at risk. Overall, 4,405 school-age children in Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda provided urine for POC-CCA testing and stool for Kato-Katz assays. By latent class analysis, one POC-CCA test was more sensitive (86% versus 62%) but less specific (72% versus ~100%) than multiple Kato-Katz smears from one stool. However, only 1% of POC-CCA tests in a non-endemic area were false positives, suggesting the latent class analysis underestimated the POC-CCA specificity. Multivariable modeling estimated POC-CCA as significantly more sensitive than Kato-Katz at low infection intensities (< 100 eggs/gram stool). By linear regression, 72% prevalence among 9-12 year olds by POC-CCA corresponded to 50% prevalence by Kato-Katz, whereas 46% POC-CCA prevalence corresponded to 10% Kato-Katz prevalence. We conclude that one urine POC-CCA test can replace Kato-Katz testing for community-level S. mansoni prevalence mapping.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23339198 PMCID: PMC3592520 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.12-0639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 2.345
School numbers and participant children surveyed in each study country*
| Country | No. schools tested | No. children tested | Overall prevalence by 1 Kato-Katz | Overall prevalence by 1 POC-CCA | Overall prevalence by 3 Kato-Katz | Overall prevalence by 3 POC-CCA | Median intensity of infections detected (EPG) [range] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameroon | 3 | 733 | 0.384 | 0.622 | 0.549 | 0.756 | 37 [46–590] |
| Côte d'Ivoire | 4 | 607 | 0.479 | 0.455 | 0.577 | 0.565 | 103 [161–235] |
| Ethiopia | 2 | 620 | 0.430 | 0.660 | 0.526 | 0.708 | 43 [69–153] |
| Kenya | 49 | 1845 | 0.151 | 0.499 | 0.221 | 0.657 | 14 [2–366] |
| Uganda | 5 | 500 | 0.250 | 0.626 | 0.250 | – | 32 [37–247] |
| Total or Overall | 63 | 4305 | 0.289 | 0.552 | 0.388 | 0.664 | 35 [2–590] |
Children surveyed in each study country (left columns). Center columns show observed prevalence of Schistosoma mansoni infection, as detected either in 1 or 3 daily stool specimens using standard Kato-Katz microscopy, or in 1 or 3 daily urine specimens using point-of-care assays for parasite circulating cathodic antigen (POC-CCA). The country-level median intensity of Kato-Katz-detected infections (in eggs per gram of feces, EPG) is indicated in the right-most column.
Figure 1.Range and variation of Schistosoma mansoni prevalence of infection in 63 participant schools. Dark bars indicate prevalence as determined by standard Kato-Katz microscopy of the first daily stool specimen; superimposed light bars indicate prevalence measured using concurrent point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen (POC-CCA) detection in the first urine specimen. Bars are arranged in order of ascending prevalence based on the Kato-Katz results.
Results of concurrent POC-CCA and Kato-Katz testing on the first daily specimens (urine and stool, respectively) obtained from enrolled 9- to 12-year-old study subjects living in Schistosoma mansoni-endemic areas of five African countries*
| Kato-Katz negative | Kato-Katz positive | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Cameroon | POC-CCA− | 231 (52.6%) | 27 (9.8%) |
| POC-CCA+ | 208 (47.4%) | 247 (90.2%) | |
| Côte d'Ivoire | POC-CCA− | 249 (85.6%) | 38 (14.2%) |
| POC-CCA+ | 42 (14.4%) | 230 (85.8%) | |
| Ethiopia | POC-CCA− | 195 (55.2%) | 16 (6.0%) |
| POC-CAA+ | 158 (44.8%) | 251 (94.0%) | |
| Kenya | POC-CCA− | 833 (55.6%) | 35 (13.2%) |
| POC-CCA+ | 664 (44.4%) | 231 (86.8%) | |
| Uganda | POC-CCA− | 176 (46.9%) | 11 (8.8%) |
| POC-CCA+ | 199 (53.1%) | 114 (91.2%) | |
| All 5 Countries | POC-CCA− | 1684 (57.0%) | 127 (10.6%) |
| POC-CCA+ | 1271 (43.0%) | 1073 (89.4%) | |
Numbers in parentheses indicate column percentages for each 2 × 2 sub-table.
POC-CCA = point-of-care assays for parasite circulating cathodic antigen.
Results of PCR testing for Schistosoma DNA in stool specimens performed on a subset of 905 Kenyan subjects*
| Test results group | Total | PCR positive | PCR negative |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kato-Katz and POC/CCA both positive | 158 | 146 (92%) | 12 (8%) |
| Kato-Katz and POC/CCA both negative | 348 | 42 (12%) | 306 (88%) |
| Kato-Katz positive, POC/CCA negative | 18 | 11 (61%) | 7 (39%) |
| Kato-Katz negative, POC/CCA positive | 381 | 105 (28%) | 276 (72%) |
| Total | 905 | 318 (33%) | 633 (67%) |
All data are from the first day stool and urine specimens. Columns show positive and negative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) results for four subgroups defined by the subject's Kato-Katz and point-of-care assays for parasite circulating cathodic antigen (POC/CCA) test results. Numbers in parentheses indicate row percentages.
As estimated by latent class analysis of all available subject data, test sensitivity, and specificity of Kato-Katz microscopy of a single stool, POC-CCA testing of a single urine, and of PCR testing of a single stool in the Schistosoma mansoni-endemic areas included in this study*
| Assay | Criterion | Countries | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameroon | Ethiopia | Côte d'Ivoire | Kenya | Uganda | Overall | ||
| Kato-Katz | Sensitivity | 64% | 59% | 77% | 44% | 61% | 62% |
| POC-CCA | Sensitivity | 87% | 92% | 78% | 86% | 89% | 86% |
| Specificity | 74% | 94% | 92% | 70% | 56% | 72% | |
| PCR | Sensitivity | 69% | |||||
| Specificity | 91% | ||||||
Results are listed for each participating study country and for all countries combined.
POC-CCA = point-of-care assays for parasite circulating cathodic antigen; PCR = polymerase chain reaction.
Figure 2.Modeled estimation of the sensitivity of a single point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen (POC-CCA) in the five study countries (as shown in the variously thin or dotted lines as indicated in the Figure) or the five taken together (thick gray line), according to the “true” local Schistosoma mansoni prevalence of infection among 9- to 12-year-old children. Comparison is shown to results for a single Kato-Katz stool examination (thick black line). The model is based on logistic regression in which “true” disease status (yes or no) of each subject is treated as a binary latent variable, and the likelihood of schistosomiasis was hypothesized to be a function of age, gender, and community to which each subject belonged.
Figure 3.Correlation of prevalence in individual schools (based on a single Kato-Katz examination) with that from a single point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen (POC-CCA) urine testing. Linear regression parameters are shown in the legend. Small black circles, Kenya; large triangles, Côte d'Ivoire; squares, Uganda; large circles with an X, Cameroon; large inverted triangles, Ethiopia. Vertical dotted lines represent school-age prevalence Kato-Katz thresholds used in the World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines for timing and coverage of mass drug administration (MDA)-based schistosomiasis control programs and horizontal dotted lines show the corresponding cutoffs for prevalence determined by the POC-CCA assay.