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Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization

INTRODUCTION: in order to contribute to the improvement of the management of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon, performance of two techniques commonly used in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis was evaluated. METHODS: a total of 541 pregnant women were recruited from seven hospitals in two Reg...

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Autores principales: Yéngué, Jacqueline Félicité, Essomba, Claudine Mireille Ntsama, Ndzengue, Georgia Elna Ambada, Sonela, Nelson, Lobè, Elise Elong, Tchouaket, Michel Carlos Tommo, Ka’e, Aude Christelle, Tchadji, Jules Colince, Kenmoe, Sebastien, Nanfack, Aubin Joseph, Bilong, Charles Félix Bilong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The African Field Epidemiology Network 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10038765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36974314
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2022.43.195.36996
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author Yéngué, Jacqueline Félicité
Essomba, Claudine Mireille Ntsama
Ndzengue, Georgia Elna Ambada
Sonela, Nelson
Lobè, Elise Elong
Tchouaket, Michel Carlos Tommo
Ka’e, Aude Christelle
Tchadji, Jules Colince
Kenmoe, Sebastien
Nanfack, Aubin Joseph
Bilong, Charles Félix Bilong
author_facet Yéngué, Jacqueline Félicité
Essomba, Claudine Mireille Ntsama
Ndzengue, Georgia Elna Ambada
Sonela, Nelson
Lobè, Elise Elong
Tchouaket, Michel Carlos Tommo
Ka’e, Aude Christelle
Tchadji, Jules Colince
Kenmoe, Sebastien
Nanfack, Aubin Joseph
Bilong, Charles Félix Bilong
author_sort Yéngué, Jacqueline Félicité
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: in order to contribute to the improvement of the management of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon, performance of two techniques commonly used in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis was evaluated. METHODS: a total of 541 pregnant women were recruited from seven hospitals in two Regions of Cameroon, of which 63% (341: Batch1) were from health facilities (HF) using a immunochromatographic technique (ICT) as a screening test for toxoplasmosis, and 37% (200: Batch2) from those using an immunoenzymatic technique (IEZ). On each sample, Ig (Immunoglobulin) G (IgG) and IgM were tested by three techniques: a Rapid Diagnostic Test (RDT), an Enzyme Linked Immuno Sorbent Assay (ELISA) and a Vidas Enzyme-linked fluorescent assay taken as reference (VIDAS/ELFA). The results from the health facilities were recorded. RESULTS: for the IgG assay, our two laboratory methods were sensitive (96.0% and 97.5%) and specific (64.2% and 59.7%). Their concordance rates with the VIDAS/ELFA reference were above 60% (P<0.001). Moreover, for the IgM assay, the performances of the two methods were equivalent: Se= 18.2%, Sp= 99.4% with a low concordance rate (Kappa = 0.24). Considering the results provided by the selected hospitals, the ELISA used in Batch2 showed similar performances to the two techniques used in reference lab while the performances were low for the RDT used in Batch1. CONCLUSION: both methods showed similar performances (good for (IgG) and poor for IgM). However, for the immunochromatographic method, differences in performance were found between our results and those provided by the selected health facilities. These differences suggest a harmonization of diagnostic techniques for toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroonian health facilities.
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spelling pubmed-100387652023-03-26 Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization Yéngué, Jacqueline Félicité Essomba, Claudine Mireille Ntsama Ndzengue, Georgia Elna Ambada Sonela, Nelson Lobè, Elise Elong Tchouaket, Michel Carlos Tommo Ka’e, Aude Christelle Tchadji, Jules Colince Kenmoe, Sebastien Nanfack, Aubin Joseph Bilong, Charles Félix Bilong Pan Afr Med J Research INTRODUCTION: in order to contribute to the improvement of the management of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon, performance of two techniques commonly used in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis was evaluated. METHODS: a total of 541 pregnant women were recruited from seven hospitals in two Regions of Cameroon, of which 63% (341: Batch1) were from health facilities (HF) using a immunochromatographic technique (ICT) as a screening test for toxoplasmosis, and 37% (200: Batch2) from those using an immunoenzymatic technique (IEZ). On each sample, Ig (Immunoglobulin) G (IgG) and IgM were tested by three techniques: a Rapid Diagnostic Test (RDT), an Enzyme Linked Immuno Sorbent Assay (ELISA) and a Vidas Enzyme-linked fluorescent assay taken as reference (VIDAS/ELFA). The results from the health facilities were recorded. RESULTS: for the IgG assay, our two laboratory methods were sensitive (96.0% and 97.5%) and specific (64.2% and 59.7%). Their concordance rates with the VIDAS/ELFA reference were above 60% (P<0.001). Moreover, for the IgM assay, the performances of the two methods were equivalent: Se= 18.2%, Sp= 99.4% with a low concordance rate (Kappa = 0.24). Considering the results provided by the selected hospitals, the ELISA used in Batch2 showed similar performances to the two techniques used in reference lab while the performances were low for the RDT used in Batch1. CONCLUSION: both methods showed similar performances (good for (IgG) and poor for IgM). However, for the immunochromatographic method, differences in performance were found between our results and those provided by the selected health facilities. These differences suggest a harmonization of diagnostic techniques for toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroonian health facilities. The African Field Epidemiology Network 2022-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10038765/ /pubmed/36974314 http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2022.43.195.36996 Text en Copyright: Jacqueline Félicité Yéngué et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/The Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Yéngué, Jacqueline Félicité
Essomba, Claudine Mireille Ntsama
Ndzengue, Georgia Elna Ambada
Sonela, Nelson
Lobè, Elise Elong
Tchouaket, Michel Carlos Tommo
Ka’e, Aude Christelle
Tchadji, Jules Colince
Kenmoe, Sebastien
Nanfack, Aubin Joseph
Bilong, Charles Félix Bilong
Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization
title Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization
title_full Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization
title_fullStr Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization
title_full_unstemmed Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization
title_short Performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in Cameroon: need for harmonization
title_sort performance of immunochromatographic and immunoenzymatic techniques in the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis in pregnant women in cameroon: need for harmonization
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10038765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36974314
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2022.43.195.36996
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