Diagnostic performance of Schistosoma real-time PCR in urine samples from Kenyan children infected with Schistosoma haematobium: day-to-day variation and follow-up after praziquantel treatment

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Natalie V. S. Vinkeles Melchers
  • Govert J. van Dam
  • David Shaproski
  • Anthony I. Kahama
  • Eric A. T. Brienen
  • Vennervald, Birgitte J
  • Lisette van Lieshout

BACKGROUND: In an effort to enhance accuracy of diagnosis of Schistosoma haematobium, this study explores day-to-day variability and diagnostic performance of real-time PCR for detection and quantification of Schistosoma DNA compared to other diagnostic tools in an endemic area before and after treatment.

METHODOLOGY: Previously collected urine samples (N = 390) from 114 preselected proven parasitological and/or clinical S. haematobium positive Kenyan schoolchildren were analyzed by a Schistosoma internal transcribed spacer-based real-time PCR after 14 years of storage. Pre-treatment day-to-day fluctuations of PCR and microscopy over three consecutive days were measured for 24 children using intra-class correlation coefficient. A combined 'gold standard' (PCR and/or microscopy positive) was used to measure sensitivity and negative predictive value (NPV) of several diagnostic tools at baseline, two and 18 months post-treatment with praziquantel.

PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: All 24 repeatedly tested children were PCR-positive over three days with little daily variation in median Ct-values, while 83.3% were found to be egg-positive for S. haematobium at day 1 and 75.0% at day 2 and 3 pre-treatment, signifying daily fluctuations in microscopy diagnosis. Of all 114 preselected schoolchildren, repeated microscopic measurements were required to detect 96.5% versus 100% of positive pre-treatment cases by single PCR. At two months post-treatment, microscopy and PCR detected 22.8% versus 69.3% positive children, respectively. Based on the 'gold standard', PCR showed high sensitivity (>92%) as compared to >31% sensitivity for microscopy, both pre- and post-treatment.

CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Detection and quantification of Schistosoma DNA in urine by real-time PCR was shown to be a powerful and specific diagnostic tool for detection of S. haematobium infections, with less day-to-day variation and higher sensitivity compared to microscopy. The superior performance of PCR before, and two and 18 months post-treatment provides a compelling argument for PCR as an accurate and reproducible tool for monitoring treatment efficacy.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2807
JournalP L o S Neglected Tropical Diseases (Print)
Volume8
Issue number4
Number of pages9
ISSN1935-2727
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

    Research areas

  • Adolescent, Animals, Anthelmintics, Child, DNA, Ribosomal Spacer, Drug Monitoring, Female, Humans, Kenya, Male, Microscopy, Parasitology, Praziquantel, Predictive Value of Tests, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Retrospective Studies, Schistosoma haematobium, Schistosomiasis haematobia, Sensitivity and Specificity, Urine

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