Cargando…

Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone

BACKGROUND: Despite identification 50 years ago, the true burden of Lassa Fever (LF) across Africa remains undefined for reasons including research focus on hospitalised patients, lack of validated field-feasible tools which reliably identify past infection, and the fact that all assays require bloo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Akpogheneta, Onome, Dicks, Steve, Grant, Donald, Kanneh, Zainab, Jusu, Brima, Edem-Hotah, Joseph, Kanneh, Lansana, Alhasan, Foday, Gbakie, Michael, Schieffelin, John, Ijaz, Samreen, Tedder, Richard, Bower, Hilary
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8041174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33788861
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009255
_version_ 1783677891668606976
author Akpogheneta, Onome
Dicks, Steve
Grant, Donald
Kanneh, Zainab
Jusu, Brima
Edem-Hotah, Joseph
Kanneh, Lansana
Alhasan, Foday
Gbakie, Michael
Schieffelin, John
Ijaz, Samreen
Tedder, Richard
Bower, Hilary
author_facet Akpogheneta, Onome
Dicks, Steve
Grant, Donald
Kanneh, Zainab
Jusu, Brima
Edem-Hotah, Joseph
Kanneh, Lansana
Alhasan, Foday
Gbakie, Michael
Schieffelin, John
Ijaz, Samreen
Tedder, Richard
Bower, Hilary
author_sort Akpogheneta, Onome
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Despite identification 50 years ago, the true burden of Lassa Fever (LF) across Africa remains undefined for reasons including research focus on hospitalised patients, lack of validated field-feasible tools which reliably identify past infection, and the fact that all assays require blood samples making large-scale surveys difficult. Designated a priority pathogen of epidemic potential requiring urgent research by the World Health Organisation, a better understanding of LF sero-epidemiology is essential to developing and evaluating new interventions including vaccines. We describe the first field testing of a novel species-neutral Double Antigen Binding Assay (DABA) designed to detect antibodies to LF in plasma and oral fluid. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Paired plasma and oral fluid were collected in Sierra Leone from survivors discharged from Kenema Government Hospital Lassa Fever Unit between 1980 and 2018, and from controls recruited in Freetown in 2019. Epidemiological sensitivity and specificity of the DABA measured against historical diagnosis in survivors and self-declared non-exposed controls was 81.7% (95% CI 70.7%– 89.9%) and 83.3% (72.7%- 91.1%) respectively in plasma, and 71.8% (60.0%– 81.9%) and 83.3% (72.7%– 91.1%) respectively in oral fluid. Antibodies were identified in people infected up to 15 years and, in one case, 40 years previously. Participants found oral fluid collection easy and painless with 80% happy to give an oral fluid sample regularly. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Given the difficulties of assay validation in a resource-limited setting, including unexpected exposures and diagnostics of varying accuracy, the new assay performed well in both plasma and oral fluid. Sensitivity and specificity are expected to be higher when case/control ascertainment is more definitive and further work is planned to investigate this. Even at the performance levels achieved, the species-neutral DABA has the potential to facilitate the large-scale seroprevalence surveys needed to underpin essential developments in LF control, as well as support zoonotic investigations.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8041174
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80411742021-04-20 Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone Akpogheneta, Onome Dicks, Steve Grant, Donald Kanneh, Zainab Jusu, Brima Edem-Hotah, Joseph Kanneh, Lansana Alhasan, Foday Gbakie, Michael Schieffelin, John Ijaz, Samreen Tedder, Richard Bower, Hilary PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Despite identification 50 years ago, the true burden of Lassa Fever (LF) across Africa remains undefined for reasons including research focus on hospitalised patients, lack of validated field-feasible tools which reliably identify past infection, and the fact that all assays require blood samples making large-scale surveys difficult. Designated a priority pathogen of epidemic potential requiring urgent research by the World Health Organisation, a better understanding of LF sero-epidemiology is essential to developing and evaluating new interventions including vaccines. We describe the first field testing of a novel species-neutral Double Antigen Binding Assay (DABA) designed to detect antibodies to LF in plasma and oral fluid. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Paired plasma and oral fluid were collected in Sierra Leone from survivors discharged from Kenema Government Hospital Lassa Fever Unit between 1980 and 2018, and from controls recruited in Freetown in 2019. Epidemiological sensitivity and specificity of the DABA measured against historical diagnosis in survivors and self-declared non-exposed controls was 81.7% (95% CI 70.7%– 89.9%) and 83.3% (72.7%- 91.1%) respectively in plasma, and 71.8% (60.0%– 81.9%) and 83.3% (72.7%– 91.1%) respectively in oral fluid. Antibodies were identified in people infected up to 15 years and, in one case, 40 years previously. Participants found oral fluid collection easy and painless with 80% happy to give an oral fluid sample regularly. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Given the difficulties of assay validation in a resource-limited setting, including unexpected exposures and diagnostics of varying accuracy, the new assay performed well in both plasma and oral fluid. Sensitivity and specificity are expected to be higher when case/control ascertainment is more definitive and further work is planned to investigate this. Even at the performance levels achieved, the species-neutral DABA has the potential to facilitate the large-scale seroprevalence surveys needed to underpin essential developments in LF control, as well as support zoonotic investigations. Public Library of Science 2021-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8041174/ /pubmed/33788861 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009255 Text en © 2021 Akpogheneta et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Akpogheneta, Onome
Dicks, Steve
Grant, Donald
Kanneh, Zainab
Jusu, Brima
Edem-Hotah, Joseph
Kanneh, Lansana
Alhasan, Foday
Gbakie, Michael
Schieffelin, John
Ijaz, Samreen
Tedder, Richard
Bower, Hilary
Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone
title Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone
title_full Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone
title_fullStr Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone
title_full_unstemmed Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone
title_short Boosting understanding of Lassa Fever virus epidemiology: Field testing a novel assay to identify past Lassa Fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in Sierra Leone
title_sort boosting understanding of lassa fever virus epidemiology: field testing a novel assay to identify past lassa fever virus infection in blood and oral fluids of survivors and unexposed controls in sierra leone
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8041174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33788861
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009255
work_keys_str_mv AT akpoghenetaonome boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT dickssteve boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT grantdonald boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT kannehzainab boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT jusubrima boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT edemhotahjoseph boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT kannehlansana boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT alhasanfoday boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT gbakiemichael boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT schieffelinjohn boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT ijazsamreen boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT tedderrichard boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone
AT bowerhilary boostingunderstandingoflassafevervirusepidemiologyfieldtestinganovelassaytoidentifypastlassafevervirusinfectioninbloodandoralfluidsofsurvivorsandunexposedcontrolsinsierraleone