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Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy

INTRODUCTION: Administration of ivermectin (IVM) as part of mass drug administration (MDA) campaigns for onchocerciasis and/or lymphatic filariasis (LF) has been suspended in areas co-endemic for Loa loa due to severe post-treatment adverse events (SAEs) associated with high-burden of infection (>...

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Autores principales: Bennuru, Sasisekhar, Pion, Sébastien D. S., Kamgno, Joseph, Wanji, Samuel, Nutman, Thomas B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4169247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25232954
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003180
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author Bennuru, Sasisekhar
Pion, Sébastien D. S.
Kamgno, Joseph
Wanji, Samuel
Nutman, Thomas B.
author_facet Bennuru, Sasisekhar
Pion, Sébastien D. S.
Kamgno, Joseph
Wanji, Samuel
Nutman, Thomas B.
author_sort Bennuru, Sasisekhar
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Administration of ivermectin (IVM) as part of mass drug administration (MDA) campaigns for onchocerciasis and/or lymphatic filariasis (LF) has been suspended in areas co-endemic for Loa loa due to severe post-treatment adverse events (SAEs) associated with high-burden of infection (>30,000 mf/ml). One simple approach for preventing SAEs is to identify and exclude individuals at risk from MDA. Here, we describe a repurposed hand-held automated cell counter (Scepter 2.0; HHAC) as a rapid, point-of-care method for quantifying microfilariae (mf) in the blood of infected individuals. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The quantification of microfilarial levels in blood of naturally infected humans, experimentally infected baboons, or mf-spiked human blood was tested using a microfluidic-based automated counter and compared to traditional calibrated thick-smears. We demonstrate that mf can be quantified in 20 µl of whole blood following lysis with 10% saponin within a minute of obtaining blood. There was a highly significant concordance between the counts obtained by the HHAC and those by microscopy for mf densities of >5,000 (p<0.0001, r(c) = 0.97) or >30,000 per ml (p<0.0001, r(c) = 0.90). Preliminary proof of concept field studies in Cameroon with 20 µl of blood from L. loa infected humans (n = 22) and baboons (n = 4) also demonstrated a significantly high concordance (p<0.0001, r(c) = 0.89) with calibrated thick blood smears counts. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: A repurposed HHAC is a portable, sensitive, rapid, point-of-care and quantitative tool to identify individuals with high levels of L. loa mf that put them at risk for SAEs following MDA. In addition, it provides ease of data storage and accessibility.
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spelling pubmed-41692472014-09-22 Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy Bennuru, Sasisekhar Pion, Sébastien D. S. Kamgno, Joseph Wanji, Samuel Nutman, Thomas B. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article INTRODUCTION: Administration of ivermectin (IVM) as part of mass drug administration (MDA) campaigns for onchocerciasis and/or lymphatic filariasis (LF) has been suspended in areas co-endemic for Loa loa due to severe post-treatment adverse events (SAEs) associated with high-burden of infection (>30,000 mf/ml). One simple approach for preventing SAEs is to identify and exclude individuals at risk from MDA. Here, we describe a repurposed hand-held automated cell counter (Scepter 2.0; HHAC) as a rapid, point-of-care method for quantifying microfilariae (mf) in the blood of infected individuals. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The quantification of microfilarial levels in blood of naturally infected humans, experimentally infected baboons, or mf-spiked human blood was tested using a microfluidic-based automated counter and compared to traditional calibrated thick-smears. We demonstrate that mf can be quantified in 20 µl of whole blood following lysis with 10% saponin within a minute of obtaining blood. There was a highly significant concordance between the counts obtained by the HHAC and those by microscopy for mf densities of >5,000 (p<0.0001, r(c) = 0.97) or >30,000 per ml (p<0.0001, r(c) = 0.90). Preliminary proof of concept field studies in Cameroon with 20 µl of blood from L. loa infected humans (n = 22) and baboons (n = 4) also demonstrated a significantly high concordance (p<0.0001, r(c) = 0.89) with calibrated thick blood smears counts. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: A repurposed HHAC is a portable, sensitive, rapid, point-of-care and quantitative tool to identify individuals with high levels of L. loa mf that put them at risk for SAEs following MDA. In addition, it provides ease of data storage and accessibility. Public Library of Science 2014-09-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4169247/ /pubmed/25232954 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003180 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bennuru, Sasisekhar
Pion, Sébastien D. S.
Kamgno, Joseph
Wanji, Samuel
Nutman, Thomas B.
Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy
title Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy
title_full Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy
title_fullStr Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy
title_full_unstemmed Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy
title_short Repurposed Automated Handheld Counter as a Point-of-Care Tool to Identify Individuals ‘At Risk’ of Serious Post-Ivermectin Encephalopathy
title_sort repurposed automated handheld counter as a point-of-care tool to identify individuals ‘at risk’ of serious post-ivermectin encephalopathy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4169247/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25232954
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003180
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