| Literature DB >> 29929514 |
Gisela Henriques1,2, Koukeo Phommasone3, Rupam Tripura1,4, Thomas J Peto1,4, Shristi Raut3, Coco Snethlage5, Im Sambo1, Nou Sanann1, Chea Nguon6, Bipin Adhikari1, Tiengkham Pongvongsa7, Mallika Imwong1,8, Lorenz von Seidlein9,10, Nicholas P Day1,4, Nicholas J White1,4, Arjen M Dondorp1,4, Paul Newton3,4, Benedikt Ley11, Mayfong Mayxay3,4,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is the most common enzymopathy worldwide. Primaquine is the only licensed drug that effectively removes Plasmodium vivax hypnozoites from the human host and prevents relapse. While well tolerated by most recipients, primaquine can cause haemolysis in G6PD deficient individuals and is, therefore, underused. Rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) could permit ascertainment of G6PD status outside of laboratory settings and hence safe treatment in remote areas. The performance of the fluorescent spot test (Trinity, Ireland; FST) and a G6PD RDT (Carestart, USA) against spectrophotometry were assessed.Entities:
Keywords: Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase; Malaria; Rapid diagnostic test; Southeast Asia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29929514 PMCID: PMC6013858 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2390-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1G6PD activity distribution by spectrophotometry in Laos. Red lines indicate 10, 30, 70 and 100% G6PD activity of the adjusted male median
Test performance/cut-off activity/country
| Laos | Cambodia | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity (95%CI) (TP/TP+FN) | Specificity (95%CI) (TN/TN+FP) | ROC area (95%CI) | Sensitivity (95%CI) (TP/TP+FN) | Specificity (95%CI) (TN/TN+FP) | ROC area (95%CI) | p* | |
| Cut-off activity = 10% | |||||||
| FSTdefint | 100.0% (71.5–100.0) (11/11) | 86.73% (84.1–89.1) (647/746) | 0.934 (0.921–0.946) | 100.0% (92.0–100.0) (44/44) | 56.2% (51.5–60.7) (259/461) | 0.781 (0.758–0.804) | < 0.001 |
| FSTdef | 100.0% (71.5–100.0) (11/11) | 96.25% (94.6–97.5) (718/746) | 0.981 (0.974–0.988) | 97.7% (88.0–99.9) (43/44) | 80.5% (76.6–74.0) (371/461) | 0.891 (0.862–0.920) | < 0.001 |
| RDT | 100.0% (71.5–100.0) (11/11) | 94.88% (93.0–96.4) (704/742) | 0.974 (0.966–0.982) | 97.6% (87.1–99.9) (40/41) | 75.3% (71.1–79.2) (344/457) | 0.864 (0.833–0.895) | < 0.001 |
| Cut-off activity = 30% | |||||||
| FSTdefint | 100.0% (90.1–100.0) (39/39) | 90.1% (87.7–92.2) (647/718) | 0.951 (0.940–0.961) | 97.9% (94.1–99.6) (142/145) | 71.1% (66.1–75.7) (256/360) | 0.845 (0.819–0.871) | < 0.001 |
| FSTdef | 100.0% (90.1–100.0) (39/39) | 100.0% (99.5–100.0) (718/718) | 1.000 (1.000–1.000) | 89.7% (83.5–94.1) (130/145) | 99.2% (97.5–99.8) (357/360) | 0.944 (0.920–0.969) | < 0.001 |
| RDT | 100.0% (90.1–100.0) (39/39) | 98.6% (97.4–99.3) (704/714) | 0.993 (0.989–0.997) | 91.4% (85.5–95.5) (128/140) | 93.0% (89.9–95.4) (333/358) | 0.922 (0.895–0.949) | < 0.001 |
| Cut-off activity = 70% | |||||||
| FSTdefint | 80.0% (67.7–89.2) (48/60) | 91.1 (88.7–93.1) (635/697) | 0.856 (0.803–0.908) | 71.9% (66.3–77.0) (207/288) | 82.0% (76.3–86.9) (178/217) | 0.770 (0.733–0.806) | < 0.001 |
| FSTdef | 65.0% (51.6–76.8) (39/60) | 100.0% (99.5–100.0) (697/697) | 0.825 (0.764–0.886) | 46.2% (40.3–52.1) (133/288) | 100.0% (98.3–100.0) (217/217) | 0.731 (0.702–0.760) | < 0.001 |
| RDT | 73.3% (60.3–83.9) (44/60) | 99.3% (98.3–99.8) (688/693) | 0.863 (0.807–0.920) | 53.4% (47.3–59.3) (151/283) | 99.1% (96.7–99.9) (213/215) | 0.762 (0.732–0.792) | < 0.001 |
FSTdefint intermediate G6PD deficiency, FSTdef, G6PD deficiency, RDT rapid diagnostic test
*Derived from number of true and false results
Fig. 2Distribution of G6PD normal and G6PD deficient test result by quantitative G6PD activity per assay and stratified by country. Red triangles = G6PD deficient test result, blue circles = G6PD normal test result. Red horizontal lines correspond to 10, 30, 70 and 100% G6PD activity of the AMM (from bottom to top), invalid RDT results are excluded