1. Neopterin and CXCL-13 in Diagnosis and Follow-Up of Trypanosoma brucei gambiense Sleeping Sickness: Lessons from the Field in Angola.
- Author
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Bonnet J, Vignoles P, Tiberti N, Gedeão V, Hainard A, Turck N, Josenando T, Ndung'u JM, Sanchez JC, Courtioux B, and Bisser S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Angola, Biomarkers cerebrospinal fluid, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, ROC Curve, Young Adult, Chemokine CXCL13 cerebrospinal fluid, Neopterin cerebrospinal fluid, Trypanosomiasis, African cerebrospinal fluid, Trypanosomiasis, African classification, Trypanosomiasis, African diagnosis
- Abstract
Human African Trypanosomiasis may become manageable in the next decade with fexinidazole. However, currently stage diagnosis remains difficult to implement in the field and requires a lumbar puncture. Our study of an Angolan cohort of T. b. gambiense -infected patients used other staging criteria than those recommended by the WHO. We compared WHO criteria (cell count and parasite identification in the CSF) with two biomarkers (neopterin and CXCL-13) which have proven potential to diagnose disease stage or relapse. Biological, clinical, and neurological data were analysed from a cohort of 83 patients. A neopterin concentration below 15.5 nmol/L in the CSF denoted patients with stage 1 disease, and a concentration above 60.31 nmol/L characterized patients with advanced stage 2 (trypanosomes in CSF and/or cytorachia higher than 20 cells) disease. CXCL-13 levels below 91.208 pg/mL denoted patients with stage 1 disease, and levels of CXCL-13 above 395.45 pg/mL denoted patients with advanced stage 2 disease. Values between these cut-offs may represent patients with intermediate stage disease. Our work supports the existence of an intermediate stage in HAT, and CXCL-13 and neopterin levels may help to characterize it., Competing Interests: BC and SB were employed for FIND at the moment of the samples collection. JMN is an employee of FIND and accepts the publication of this study., (Copyright © 2019 Julien Bonnet et al.)
- Published
- 2019
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