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Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection

BACKGROUND: Nucleic acid amplification provides the most sensitive and accurate method to detect and identify pathogens. This is primarily useful for epidemiological investigations of malaria because the infections, often with two or more Plasmodium species present simultaneously, are frequently ass...

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Autores principales: Proux, Stéphane, Suwanarusk, Rossarin, Barends, Marion, Zwang, Julien, Price, Ric N, Leimanis, Mara, Kiricharoen, Lily, Laochan, Natthapon, Russell, Bruce, Nosten, François, Snounou, Georges
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3219859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22034851
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-323
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author Proux, Stéphane
Suwanarusk, Rossarin
Barends, Marion
Zwang, Julien
Price, Ric N
Leimanis, Mara
Kiricharoen, Lily
Laochan, Natthapon
Russell, Bruce
Nosten, François
Snounou, Georges
author_facet Proux, Stéphane
Suwanarusk, Rossarin
Barends, Marion
Zwang, Julien
Price, Ric N
Leimanis, Mara
Kiricharoen, Lily
Laochan, Natthapon
Russell, Bruce
Nosten, François
Snounou, Georges
author_sort Proux, Stéphane
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Nucleic acid amplification provides the most sensitive and accurate method to detect and identify pathogens. This is primarily useful for epidemiological investigations of malaria because the infections, often with two or more Plasmodium species present simultaneously, are frequently associated with microscopically sub-patent parasite levels and cryptic mixed infections. Numerous distinct equally adequate amplification-based protocols have been described, but it is unclear which to select for epidemiological surveys. Few comparative studies are available, and none that addresses the issue of inter-laboratory variability. METHODS: Blood samples were collected from patients attending malaria clinics on the Thai-Myanmar border. Frozen aliquots from 413 samples were tested independently in two laboratories by nested PCR assay. Dried blood spots on filter papers from the same patients were also tested by the nested PCR assay in one laboratory and by a multiplex PCR assay in another. The aim was to determine which protocol best detected parasites below the sensitivity level of microscopic examination. RESULTS: As expected PCR-based assays detected a substantial number of infected samples, or mixed infections, missed by microscopy (27 and 42 for the most sensitive assay, respectively). The protocol that was most effective at detecting these, in particular mixed infections, was a nested PCR assay with individual secondary reactions for each of the species initiated with a template directly purified from the blood sample. However, a lesser sensitivity in detection was observed when the same protocol was conducted in another laboratory, and this significantly altered the data obtained on the parasite species distribution. CONCLUSIONS: The sensitivity of a given PCR assay varies between laboratories. Although, the variations are relatively minor, they primarily diminish the ability to detect low-level and mixed infections and are sufficient to obviate the main rationale to use PCR assays rather than microscopy or rapid diagnostic tests. The optimal approach to standardise methodologies is to provide PCR template standards. These will help researchers in different settings to ensure that the nucleic acid amplification protocols they wish to use provide the requisite level of sensitivity, and will permit comparison between sites.
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spelling pubmed-32198592011-11-18 Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection Proux, Stéphane Suwanarusk, Rossarin Barends, Marion Zwang, Julien Price, Ric N Leimanis, Mara Kiricharoen, Lily Laochan, Natthapon Russell, Bruce Nosten, François Snounou, Georges Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Nucleic acid amplification provides the most sensitive and accurate method to detect and identify pathogens. This is primarily useful for epidemiological investigations of malaria because the infections, often with two or more Plasmodium species present simultaneously, are frequently associated with microscopically sub-patent parasite levels and cryptic mixed infections. Numerous distinct equally adequate amplification-based protocols have been described, but it is unclear which to select for epidemiological surveys. Few comparative studies are available, and none that addresses the issue of inter-laboratory variability. METHODS: Blood samples were collected from patients attending malaria clinics on the Thai-Myanmar border. Frozen aliquots from 413 samples were tested independently in two laboratories by nested PCR assay. Dried blood spots on filter papers from the same patients were also tested by the nested PCR assay in one laboratory and by a multiplex PCR assay in another. The aim was to determine which protocol best detected parasites below the sensitivity level of microscopic examination. RESULTS: As expected PCR-based assays detected a substantial number of infected samples, or mixed infections, missed by microscopy (27 and 42 for the most sensitive assay, respectively). The protocol that was most effective at detecting these, in particular mixed infections, was a nested PCR assay with individual secondary reactions for each of the species initiated with a template directly purified from the blood sample. However, a lesser sensitivity in detection was observed when the same protocol was conducted in another laboratory, and this significantly altered the data obtained on the parasite species distribution. CONCLUSIONS: The sensitivity of a given PCR assay varies between laboratories. Although, the variations are relatively minor, they primarily diminish the ability to detect low-level and mixed infections and are sufficient to obviate the main rationale to use PCR assays rather than microscopy or rapid diagnostic tests. The optimal approach to standardise methodologies is to provide PCR template standards. These will help researchers in different settings to ensure that the nucleic acid amplification protocols they wish to use provide the requisite level of sensitivity, and will permit comparison between sites. BioMed Central 2011-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3219859/ /pubmed/22034851 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-323 Text en Copyright ©2011 Proux et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Proux, Stéphane
Suwanarusk, Rossarin
Barends, Marion
Zwang, Julien
Price, Ric N
Leimanis, Mara
Kiricharoen, Lily
Laochan, Natthapon
Russell, Bruce
Nosten, François
Snounou, Georges
Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection
title Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection
title_full Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection
title_fullStr Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection
title_full_unstemmed Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection
title_short Considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection
title_sort considerations on the use of nucleic acid-based amplification for malaria parasite detection
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3219859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22034851
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-323
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