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Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis

BACKGROUND: Epidemiological surveys of malaria currently rely on microscopy, polymerase chain reaction assays (PCR) or rapid diagnostic test kits for Plasmodium infections (RDTs). This study investigated whether mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopy coupled with supervised machine learning could constitut...

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Autores principales: Mwanga, Emmanuel P., Minja, Elihaika G., Mrimi, Emmanuel, Jiménez, Mario González, Swai, Johnson K., Abbasi, Said, Ngowo, Halfan S., Siria, Doreen J., Mapua, Salum, Stica, Caleb, Maia, Marta F., Olotu, Ally, Sikulu-Lord, Maggy T., Baldini, Francesco, Ferguson, Heather M., Wynne, Klaas, Selvaraj, Prashanth, Babayan, Simon A., Okumu, Fredros O.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6781347/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31590669
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-019-2982-9
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author Mwanga, Emmanuel P.
Minja, Elihaika G.
Mrimi, Emmanuel
Jiménez, Mario González
Swai, Johnson K.
Abbasi, Said
Ngowo, Halfan S.
Siria, Doreen J.
Mapua, Salum
Stica, Caleb
Maia, Marta F.
Olotu, Ally
Sikulu-Lord, Maggy T.
Baldini, Francesco
Ferguson, Heather M.
Wynne, Klaas
Selvaraj, Prashanth
Babayan, Simon A.
Okumu, Fredros O.
author_facet Mwanga, Emmanuel P.
Minja, Elihaika G.
Mrimi, Emmanuel
Jiménez, Mario González
Swai, Johnson K.
Abbasi, Said
Ngowo, Halfan S.
Siria, Doreen J.
Mapua, Salum
Stica, Caleb
Maia, Marta F.
Olotu, Ally
Sikulu-Lord, Maggy T.
Baldini, Francesco
Ferguson, Heather M.
Wynne, Klaas
Selvaraj, Prashanth
Babayan, Simon A.
Okumu, Fredros O.
author_sort Mwanga, Emmanuel P.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Epidemiological surveys of malaria currently rely on microscopy, polymerase chain reaction assays (PCR) or rapid diagnostic test kits for Plasmodium infections (RDTs). This study investigated whether mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopy coupled with supervised machine learning could constitute an alternative method for rapid malaria screening, directly from dried human blood spots. METHODS: Filter papers containing dried blood spots (DBS) were obtained from a cross-sectional malaria survey in 12 wards in southeastern Tanzania in 2018/19. The DBS were scanned using attenuated total reflection-Fourier Transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectrometer to obtain high-resolution MIR spectra in the range 4000 cm(−1) to 500 cm(−1). The spectra were cleaned to compensate for atmospheric water vapour and CO(2) interference bands and used to train different classification algorithms to distinguish between malaria-positive and malaria-negative DBS papers based on PCR test results as reference. The analysis considered 296 individuals, including 123 PCR-confirmed malaria positives and 173 negatives. Model training was done using 80% of the dataset, after which the best-fitting model was optimized by bootstrapping of 80/20 train/test-stratified splits. The trained models were evaluated by predicting Plasmodium falciparum positivity in the 20% validation set of DBS. RESULTS: Logistic regression was the best-performing model. Considering PCR as reference, the models attained overall accuracies of 92% for predicting P. falciparum infections (specificity = 91.7%; sensitivity = 92.8%) and 85% for predicting mixed infections of P. falciparum and Plasmodium ovale (specificity = 85%, sensitivity = 85%) in the field-collected specimen. CONCLUSION: These results demonstrate that mid-infrared spectroscopy coupled with supervised machine learning (MIR-ML) could be used to screen for malaria parasites in human DBS. The approach could have potential for rapid and high-throughput screening of Plasmodium in both non-clinical settings (e.g., field surveys) and clinical settings (diagnosis to aid case management). However, before the approach can be used, we need additional field validation in other study sites with different parasite populations, and in-depth evaluation of the biological basis of the MIR signals. Improving the classification algorithms, and model training on larger datasets could also improve specificity and sensitivity. The MIR-ML spectroscopy system is physically robust, low-cost, and requires minimum maintenance.
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spelling pubmed-67813472019-10-17 Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis Mwanga, Emmanuel P. Minja, Elihaika G. Mrimi, Emmanuel Jiménez, Mario González Swai, Johnson K. Abbasi, Said Ngowo, Halfan S. Siria, Doreen J. Mapua, Salum Stica, Caleb Maia, Marta F. Olotu, Ally Sikulu-Lord, Maggy T. Baldini, Francesco Ferguson, Heather M. Wynne, Klaas Selvaraj, Prashanth Babayan, Simon A. Okumu, Fredros O. Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Epidemiological surveys of malaria currently rely on microscopy, polymerase chain reaction assays (PCR) or rapid diagnostic test kits for Plasmodium infections (RDTs). This study investigated whether mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopy coupled with supervised machine learning could constitute an alternative method for rapid malaria screening, directly from dried human blood spots. METHODS: Filter papers containing dried blood spots (DBS) were obtained from a cross-sectional malaria survey in 12 wards in southeastern Tanzania in 2018/19. The DBS were scanned using attenuated total reflection-Fourier Transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectrometer to obtain high-resolution MIR spectra in the range 4000 cm(−1) to 500 cm(−1). The spectra were cleaned to compensate for atmospheric water vapour and CO(2) interference bands and used to train different classification algorithms to distinguish between malaria-positive and malaria-negative DBS papers based on PCR test results as reference. The analysis considered 296 individuals, including 123 PCR-confirmed malaria positives and 173 negatives. Model training was done using 80% of the dataset, after which the best-fitting model was optimized by bootstrapping of 80/20 train/test-stratified splits. The trained models were evaluated by predicting Plasmodium falciparum positivity in the 20% validation set of DBS. RESULTS: Logistic regression was the best-performing model. Considering PCR as reference, the models attained overall accuracies of 92% for predicting P. falciparum infections (specificity = 91.7%; sensitivity = 92.8%) and 85% for predicting mixed infections of P. falciparum and Plasmodium ovale (specificity = 85%, sensitivity = 85%) in the field-collected specimen. CONCLUSION: These results demonstrate that mid-infrared spectroscopy coupled with supervised machine learning (MIR-ML) could be used to screen for malaria parasites in human DBS. The approach could have potential for rapid and high-throughput screening of Plasmodium in both non-clinical settings (e.g., field surveys) and clinical settings (diagnosis to aid case management). However, before the approach can be used, we need additional field validation in other study sites with different parasite populations, and in-depth evaluation of the biological basis of the MIR signals. Improving the classification algorithms, and model training on larger datasets could also improve specificity and sensitivity. The MIR-ML spectroscopy system is physically robust, low-cost, and requires minimum maintenance. BioMed Central 2019-10-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6781347/ /pubmed/31590669 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-019-2982-9 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Mwanga, Emmanuel P.
Minja, Elihaika G.
Mrimi, Emmanuel
Jiménez, Mario González
Swai, Johnson K.
Abbasi, Said
Ngowo, Halfan S.
Siria, Doreen J.
Mapua, Salum
Stica, Caleb
Maia, Marta F.
Olotu, Ally
Sikulu-Lord, Maggy T.
Baldini, Francesco
Ferguson, Heather M.
Wynne, Klaas
Selvaraj, Prashanth
Babayan, Simon A.
Okumu, Fredros O.
Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis
title Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis
title_full Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis
title_fullStr Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis
title_full_unstemmed Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis
title_short Detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis
title_sort detection of malaria parasites in dried human blood spots using mid-infrared spectroscopy and logistic regression analysis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6781347/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31590669
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-019-2982-9
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