BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Blood donations are often wasted for lack of a satisfactory procedure to evaluate donors potentially exposed to malaria. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We evaluated a commercial ELISA for the detection of antibodies to malaria and compared it with an immunofluorescent antibody test (IFAT). RESULTS: When 5,311 sera from routine non-exposed donors were tested, 24 (0.45%) were positive by the ELISA, using a Plasmodium falciparum antigen. Seventeen were subjected to confirmatory testing but none were positive by IFAT. Of 1,000 donors potentially exposed in endemic areas 15 (1.5%) were repeatably reactive by ELISA. 10 of these were tested by IFAT and 2 were positive. When 150 patients attending the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in London with acute malaria were tested, 73% of those infected with P. falciparum were repeatably reactive for malarial antibodies by ELISA and 56% with Plasmodium vivax. Of 88 stored clinical sera tested by both IFAT and ELISA 56 were positive by IFAT and of these 52 (93 degrees/0) were positive by ELISA. CONCLUSION: The ELISA is sufficiently sensitive and specific to screen at-risk donors. Its use could safely retrieve 40,000 red cell units currently discarded each year in Great Britain.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Blood donations are often wasted for lack of a satisfactory procedure to evaluate donors potentially exposed to malaria. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We evaluated a commercial ELISA for the detection of antibodies to malaria and compared it with an immunofluorescent antibody test (IFAT). RESULTS: When 5,311 sera from routine non-exposed donors were tested, 24 (0.45%) were positive by the ELISA, using a Plasmodium falciparum antigen. Seventeen were subjected to confirmatory testing but none were positive by IFAT. Of 1,000 donors potentially exposed in endemic areas 15 (1.5%) were repeatably reactive by ELISA. 10 of these were tested by IFAT and 2 were positive. When 150 patients attending the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in London with acute malaria were tested, 73% of those infected with P. falciparum were repeatably reactive for malarial antibodies by ELISA and 56% with Plasmodium vivax. Of 88 stored clinical sera tested by both IFAT and ELISA 56 were positive by IFAT and of these 52 (93 degrees/0) were positive by ELISA. CONCLUSION: The ELISA is sufficiently sensitive and specific to screen at-risk donors. Its use could safely retrieve 40,000 red cell units currently discarded each year in Great Britain.
Authors: R Slinger; A Giulivi; M Bodie-Collins; F Hindieh; R S John; G Sher; M Goldman; M Ricketts; K C Kain Journal: CMAJ Date: 2001-02-06 Impact factor: 8.262
Authors: J M Rubio; A Benito; P J Berzosa; J Roche; S Puente; M Subirats; R López-Vélez; L García; J Alvar Journal: J Clin Microbiol Date: 1999-10 Impact factor: 5.948
Authors: Christoph Niederhauser; Caroline Tinguely; Jens Dreier; Tanja Vollmer; Hans Peter Marti; Beatrice Nickel; Julia Maria Klemens; Jens Miguel Warnecke; Peter Gowland Journal: Transfus Med Hemother Date: 2021-05-26 Impact factor: 3.747