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Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan

Blood and bone marrow cultures are considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of typhoid, but these methods require infrastructure and skilled staff that are not always available in low- and middle-income countries where typhoid is endemic. The objective of the study is to evaluate the sensitivi...

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Autores principales: Sapkota, Jyotshna, Hasan, Rumina, Onsare, Robert, Arafah, Sonia, Kariuki, Sam, Shakoor, Sadia, Qamar, Farah, Mundalo, Sheillah, Njeru, Frida, Too, Rael, Ndegwa, Elizabeth, Andrews, Jason R., Dittrich, Sabine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9769786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36448816
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jcm.01000-22
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author Sapkota, Jyotshna
Hasan, Rumina
Onsare, Robert
Arafah, Sonia
Kariuki, Sam
Shakoor, Sadia
Qamar, Farah
Mundalo, Sheillah
Njeru, Frida
Too, Rael
Ndegwa, Elizabeth
Andrews, Jason R.
Dittrich, Sabine
author_facet Sapkota, Jyotshna
Hasan, Rumina
Onsare, Robert
Arafah, Sonia
Kariuki, Sam
Shakoor, Sadia
Qamar, Farah
Mundalo, Sheillah
Njeru, Frida
Too, Rael
Ndegwa, Elizabeth
Andrews, Jason R.
Dittrich, Sabine
author_sort Sapkota, Jyotshna
collection PubMed
description Blood and bone marrow cultures are considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of typhoid, but these methods require infrastructure and skilled staff that are not always available in low- and middle-income countries where typhoid is endemic. The objective of the study is to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of nine commercially available Salmonella Typhi rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) using blood culture as a reference standard in a multicenter study. This was a prospective and retrospective multicenter diagnostic accuracy study conducted in two geographically distant areas where typhoid is endemic (Pakistan and Kenya; NCT04801602). Nine RDTs were evaluated, including the Widal test. Point estimates for sensitivity and specificity were calculated using the Wilson method. Latent class analyses were performed using R to address the imperfect gold standard. A total of 531 serum samples were evaluated (264 blood culture positive; 267 blood culture negative). The sensitivity of RDTs varied widely (range, 0 to 78.8%), with the best overall performance shown by Enterocheck WB (72.7% sensitivity, 86.5% specificity). In latent class modeling, CTK IgG was found to have the highest sensitivity (79.1%), while the highest overall accuracy was observed with Enterocheck (73.8% sensitivity, 94.5% specificity). All commercially available Salmonella Typhi RDTs evaluated in the study had sensitivity and specificity values that fell below the required levels to be recommended for an accurate diagnosis. There were minimal differences in RDT performances between regions of endemicity. These findings highlight the clear need for new and more-accurate Salmonella Typhi tests.
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spelling pubmed-97697862022-12-22 Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan Sapkota, Jyotshna Hasan, Rumina Onsare, Robert Arafah, Sonia Kariuki, Sam Shakoor, Sadia Qamar, Farah Mundalo, Sheillah Njeru, Frida Too, Rael Ndegwa, Elizabeth Andrews, Jason R. Dittrich, Sabine J Clin Microbiol Immunoassays Blood and bone marrow cultures are considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of typhoid, but these methods require infrastructure and skilled staff that are not always available in low- and middle-income countries where typhoid is endemic. The objective of the study is to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of nine commercially available Salmonella Typhi rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) using blood culture as a reference standard in a multicenter study. This was a prospective and retrospective multicenter diagnostic accuracy study conducted in two geographically distant areas where typhoid is endemic (Pakistan and Kenya; NCT04801602). Nine RDTs were evaluated, including the Widal test. Point estimates for sensitivity and specificity were calculated using the Wilson method. Latent class analyses were performed using R to address the imperfect gold standard. A total of 531 serum samples were evaluated (264 blood culture positive; 267 blood culture negative). The sensitivity of RDTs varied widely (range, 0 to 78.8%), with the best overall performance shown by Enterocheck WB (72.7% sensitivity, 86.5% specificity). In latent class modeling, CTK IgG was found to have the highest sensitivity (79.1%), while the highest overall accuracy was observed with Enterocheck (73.8% sensitivity, 94.5% specificity). All commercially available Salmonella Typhi RDTs evaluated in the study had sensitivity and specificity values that fell below the required levels to be recommended for an accurate diagnosis. There were minimal differences in RDT performances between regions of endemicity. These findings highlight the clear need for new and more-accurate Salmonella Typhi tests. American Society for Microbiology 2022-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9769786/ /pubmed/36448816 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jcm.01000-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Sapkota et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Immunoassays
Sapkota, Jyotshna
Hasan, Rumina
Onsare, Robert
Arafah, Sonia
Kariuki, Sam
Shakoor, Sadia
Qamar, Farah
Mundalo, Sheillah
Njeru, Frida
Too, Rael
Ndegwa, Elizabeth
Andrews, Jason R.
Dittrich, Sabine
Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan
title Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan
title_full Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan
title_fullStr Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan
title_short Comparative Analysis of Commercially Available Typhoid Point-of-Care Tests: Results of a Prospective and Hybrid Retrospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study in Kenya and Pakistan
title_sort comparative analysis of commercially available typhoid point-of-care tests: results of a prospective and hybrid retrospective multicenter diagnostic accuracy study in kenya and pakistan
topic Immunoassays
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9769786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36448816
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jcm.01000-22
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