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Diagnostic accuracy of commercially available immunochromatographic rapid tests for diagnosis of dengue in India

Authors :
Raman Mahajan
Mohit Nair
Ana-Maria Saldanha
Amit Harshana
Alan De Lima Pereira
Nandita Basu
Rama Prasad Goswami
Nemai Bhattacharya
Bhaswati Bandyopadhay
Manideepa SenGupta
Moutusi Day
Laurence Flevaud
Marleen Boelaert
Sakib Burza
Source :
Journal of Vector Borne Diseases, Vol 58, Iss 2, Pp 159-164 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications, 2021.

Abstract

Background & objectives: There is limited evidence regarding the accuracy of dengue rapid diagnostic kits despite their extensive use in India. We evaluated the performance of four immunochromatographic Rapid Diagnostic Test (RDTs) kits: Multisure dengue Ab/Ag rapid test (MP biomedicals; MP), Dengucheck combo (Zephyr Biomedicals; ZB), SD bioline dengue duo (Alere; SD) and Dengue day 1 test (J Mitra; JM). Methods: This is a laboratory-based diagnostic evaluation study. Rapid tests results were compared to reference non-structural (NS1) antigen or immunoglobulin M (IgM) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) results of 241 dengue-positive samples and 247 dengue-negative samples. Sensitivity and specificity of NS1 and IgM components of each RDT were calculated separately and in combination (either NS1 or IgM positive) against reference standard ELISA. Results: A total of 238, 226, 208, and 146 reference NS1 ELISA samples were tested with MP, ZB, SD, and JM tests, respectively. In comparison to the NS1 ELISA reference tests, the NS1 component of MP, ZB, SD, and JM RDTs demonstrated a sensitivity of 71.8%, 85.1%, 77.2% and 80.9% respectively and specificity of 90.1%, 92.8%, 96.1 %, and 93.6%, respectively. In comparison to the IgM ELISA reference test, the IgM component of RDTs showed a sensitivity of 40.0%, 50.3%, 47.3% and 20.0% respectively and specificity of 92.4%, 88.6%, 96.5%, and 92.2% respectively. Combining NS1 antigen and IgM antibody results led to sensitivities of 87.5%, 82.9%, 93.8% and 91.7% respectively, and specificities of 75.3%, 73.9%, 76.5%, and 80.0% respectively. Interpretation & conclusion: Though specificities were acceptable, the sensitivities of each test were markedly lower than manufacturers’ claims. These results also support the added value of combined antigen-and antibody-based RDTs for the diagnosis of acute dengue.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09729062
Volume :
58
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Vector Borne Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4aac5aeee34e38a3bad49cb35c03f6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/0972-9062.321747