Estimating the added utility of highly sensitive histidine-rich protein 2 detection in outpatient clinics in Sub-Saharan Africa

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Abstract

Most malaria testing is by rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) that detect Plasmodium falciparum histidine-rich protein 2 (HRP2). Recently, several RDT manufacturers have developed highly sensitive RDTs (hsRDTs), promising a limit of detection (LOD) orders of magnitude lower than conventional RDTs. To model the added utility of hsRDTs, HRP2 concentration in Angolan outpatients was measured quantitatively using an ultrasensitive bead-based assay. The distribution of HRP2 concentration was bimodal in both afebrile and febrile patients. The conventional RDT was able to detect 81% of all HRP2-positive febrile patients and 52-77% of HRP2-positive afebrile patients. The added utility of hsRDTs was estimated to be greater in afebrile patients, where an hsRDT with a LOD of 200 pg/mL would detect an additional 50-60% of HRP2-positive persons compared with a conventional RDT with a LOD of 3,000 pg/mL. In febrile patients, the hsRDT would detect an additional 10-20%of cases. Conventional RDTs already capture the vast majority of symptomatic HRP2-positive individuals, and hsRDTs would have to reach a sufficiently low LOD approaching 200 pg/mL to provide added utility in identifying HRP2-positive, asymptomatic individuals.

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Plucinski, M. M., Rogier, E., Dimbu, P. R., Fortes, F., Halsey, E. S., & Aidoo, M. (2017). Estimating the added utility of highly sensitive histidine-rich protein 2 detection in outpatient clinics in Sub-Saharan Africa. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 97(4), 1159–1162. https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.17-0262

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