Purpose of reviewIn 2010, the WHO-Informal Working Group on Echinococcosis (IWGE) published an Expert Consensus on the diagnosis and treatment of echinococcal infections. We provide an update on the diagnosis of cystic echinococcosis through a scoping review of the literature published after the release of the WHO-IWGE document.Recent findingsUltrasound accurately and reliably depicts the pathognomonic signs of cystic echinococcosis (CE) stages compared with other imaging techniques. Among these, T2-wighted MRI is to be preferred to computed tomography, which has poor performance for the etiological diagnosis of CE. A negative serology cannot exclude the diagnosis of CE, while a positive serology, applied after the visualization of a CE-compatible lesion, may confirm a CE diagnosis. Serology alone must not be used to define 'CE' nor as 'screening' tool for infection. Other imaging and laboratory techniques did not show clinically applicable performances.SummaryIn the absence of a focal lesion compatible with a CE cyst, no diagnosis of CE should be attempted. There is urgent need to achieve univocal CE case definitions and consensus diagnostic algorithm, as well as standardization of diagnostic methods and issue of a Target Product Profile of CE diagnostics, as advocated by the WHO in the 2021-2030 roadmap for neglected tropical diseases (NTDs).
CITATION STYLE
Siles-Lucas, M., Uchiumi, L., & Tamarozzi, F. (2023, October 1). “No cyst, no echinococcosis”: A scoping review update on the diagnosis of cystic echinococcosis after the issue of the WHO-IWGE Expert Consensus and current perspectives. Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. https://doi.org/10.1097/QCO.0000000000000941
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