1. Rapid accurate field diagnosis of Indian visceral leishmaniasis
- Author
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Steven G. Reed, Henry W. Murray, Shyam Sundar, Vijay P. Singh, and Prasanna C. K. Kumar
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Cirrhosis ,Tuberculosis ,Adolescent ,Fingerstick ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Protozoan Proteins ,Antibodies, Protozoan ,Antigens, Protozoan ,Immunologic Tests ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Gastroenterology ,Internal medicine ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Prospective cohort study ,Saline ,Reagent Strips ,Chromatography ,business.industry ,Leishmaniasis ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Visceral leishmaniasis ,Leishmaniasis, Visceral ,Female ,business ,Malaria ,Leishmania donovani - Abstract
Summary Background A firm diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar) requires demonstration of the parasite in organ aspirates or tissue biopsy samples. The aim of this prospective study was to assess the diagnostic usefulness of non-invasive testing for antibody to the leishmanial antigen K39 by means of antigen-impregnated nitrocellulose paper strips adapted for use under field conditions. Methods One drop of peripheral blood is applied to the nitrocellulose strip. Three drops of test buffer (phosphate-buffered saline plus bovine serum albumin) are added to the dried blood. The development of two visible bands indicates presence of IgG anti-K39. 323 consecutive patients with suspected kala-azar referred to two specialist units in India, and 25 healthy controls, provided fingerstick blood samples for the test. Spleen aspirates were taken from 250 patients. Findings Kala-azar was confirmed by microscopy of spleen-aspirate smears in 127 patients. The K39 strip test was positive in all 127; the estimated sensitivity was therefore 100% (95% Cl 98–100). Four patients had positive strip tests but negative aspirate smears; all four responded to treatment for leishmaniasis. 217 individuals, including the 25 healthy controls, 73 patients with malaria or tuberculosis, and 119 spleen-aspirate-negative patients who had presumed malaria or cirrhosis (79) or no final diagnosis (40), had negative strip-test results. None of the 119 aspirate-negative patients developed evidence of kala-azar during 3–6 months of follow-up. The estimated specificity of the strip test was 98% (95–100; 217/221). Interpretation Detection of anti-K39 by immuno-chromatographic strip testing is a rapid and non-invasive method of diagnosing kala-azar, which has good sensitivity and specificity and is well suited for use in field conditions.
- Published
- 1998