| Literature DB >> 28369085 |
Xavier C Ding1, Maria Paz Ade2, J Kevin Baird3,4, Qin Cheng5, Jane Cunningham6, Mehul Dhorda7,8, Chris Drakeley9, Ingrid Felger10,11, Dionicia Gamboa12,13, Matthias Harbers14, Socrates Herrera15, Naomi Lucchi16, Alfredo Mayor17,18, Ivo Mueller19,20, Jetsumon Sattabongkot21, Arsène Ratsimbason22,23, Jack Richards24,25, Marcel Tanner10,11, Iveth J González1.
Abstract
The global prevalence of malaria has decreased over the past fifteen years, but similar gains have not been realized against Plasmodium vivax because this species is less responsive to conventional malaria control interventions aimed principally at P. falciparum. Approximately half of all malaria cases outside of Africa are caused by P. vivax. This species places dormant forms in human liver that cause repeated clinical attacks without involving another mosquito bite. The diagnosis of acute patent P. vivax malaria relies primarily on light microscopy. Specific rapid diagnostic tests exist but typically perform relatively poorly compared to those for P. falciparum. Better diagnostic tests are needed for P. vivax. To guide their development, FIND, in collaboration with P. vivax experts, identified the specific diagnostic needs associated with this species and defined a series of three distinct target product profiles, each aimed at a particular diagnostic application: (i) point-of-care of acutely ill patients for clinical care purposes; (ii) point-of-care asymptomatic and otherwise sub-patent residents for public health purposes, e.g., mass screen and treat campaigns; and (iii) ultra-sensitive not point-of-care diagnosis for epidemiological research/surveillance purposes. This report presents and discusses the rationale for these P. vivax-specific diagnostic target product profiles. These contribute to the rational development of fit-for-purpose diagnostic tests suitable for the clinical management, control and elimination of P. vivax malaria.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28369085 PMCID: PMC5391123 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005516
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Average panel detection scores of quality-controlled RDTs from WHO-FIND Product Testing Programme (n = 126).
| Species | Antigen | n | Average PDS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pv-pLDH | 32 | 59% (0%-100%) | |
| Pvom-pLDH | 3 | 77% (63%-91%) | |
| aldolase | 6 | 41% (0%-82%) | |
| Pf-pLDH | 9 | 52% (6%-89%) | |
| HRP2 | 113 | 82% (32%-99%) |
aAverage panel detection score (PDS) of the corresponding Plasmodium species at 200 parasites per μL of blood. Extracted from [30].
bRepresenting the pLDH epitopes common to P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae, enabling the indiscriminate detection of these three species.
Fig 1Malaria testing strategies and TPP coverage.
Testing strategies are typically classified as passive and active detection where passive detection concerns symptomatic cases and active detection all infections, symptomatic or not. Passive detection is used for the confirmation of symptomatic suspected cases presenting to the healthcare system where treatment is based on a positive parasitological test (PCD: passive case detection). Active detection is typically divided as reactive and proactive detection where reactive detection consists of the active screening of a set of individuals linked geographically or sociologically to an index case for infection detection and treatment. Proactive detection can either be linked with treatment in focal screen-and-treat (FSAT) or mass screen-and-treat (MSAT) interventions or in location-based testing (e.g. boarder screening) or be independent of treatment in epidemiological surveys. The coverage of each of the three TPPs for P. vivax diagnostic tests, PvA, PvB1 and PvB2, is indicated in relation to these testing strategies. The classification of intervention types is adapted from [36].
Summary of key distinguishing features of TPP PvA, PvB1, and PvB2
| Type | Characteristic | PvA | PvB1 | PvB2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intended use | For parasitological confirmation of symptomatic suspected cases of | For parasitological confirmation of all infections of | For indication of present or recent | |
| Test outcome | Guide individual treatment in passive case detection | Guide individual treatment in reactive and proactive case detection | Inform epidemiological surveys, guide population interventions | |
| Target population | All individuals suspected to suffer from clinical | All individuals susceptible to suffer from | All individuals in an endemic setting | |
| Target users | M | M: Community and facility-based health workers | M: Laboratory technicians | |
| Implementation level | Community health facilities, health posts, health centers | Community health facilities, health posts, health centers | District hospitals and reference laboratories | |
| Analytical sensitivity | M: 25 p/μL | M: 20 p/μL | M: 0.1 p/μL (irrelevant for recent past infection detection) | |
| Analytical specificity | M: Discriminate | M: Discriminate | M: Discriminate between | |
| Diagnostic sensitivity | M: >95% | M: >95% | M: >95% | |
| Diagnostic specificity | M: >95% | M: >95% | M: >95% | |
| Assay format | M and O: Single-use | M and O: Single-use | M: 96-well format | |
| Assay throughput | Single assessment per test | Single assessment per test with the option to batch test up to 100 samples per run in a POC format | Batch testing in line with assay format | |
| Equipment | M: small (<100 cm2 footprint) and portable (<5 kg) | M: small (<100 cm2 footprint) and portable (<5 kg) | M: Transportable (<20 kg) | |
| Sample type | M: Capillary blood | M: Capillary blood | M: Capillary blood | |
| Sample volume (if capillary blood) | M: ≤ 100 μL | M: ≤ 100 μL | M: ≤ 200 μL | |
| Time-to-result | M: ≤ 1 hour | M: ≤ 6 hours | M: ≤ 1 month | |
| End user price per test | M: ≤1.0 USD | M: ≤2.0 USD | M: ≤1.0 USD | |
| Cost of diagnosis per sample | M: ≤2.0 USD | M: ≤5.0 USD | M: ≤1.2 USD |
aValues in parasite per μL of blood might not be relevant for all assay types, especially for TPP PvB2, which is not for a parasitological test and includes the detection of recent infection.
bM: minimal, O: optimal
cas compared to standard PCR with a know limit of detection of 1 p/μL (PvA and PvB1) and a method with an analytical sensitivity at least equal to that of the index test (PvB2).