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Identifying thresholds to classify moderate-to-heavy soil-transmitted helminth intensity infections for FECPAKG2, McMaster, Mini-FLOTAC and qPCR

Levecke, Bruno and Cools, Piet and Albonico, Marco and Ame, Shaali and Angebault, Cécile and Ayana, Mio and Behnke, Jerzy M. and Bethony, Jeffrey M. and Cringoli, Giuseppe and Dana, Daniel and Guillard, Bertrand and Viet Hoa, Nguyen Thi and Kang, Gagandeep and Kattula, Deepthi and Keiser, Jennifer and Kotze, Andrew C. and Matoso, Leonardo F. and Maurelli, Maria P. and McCarthy, James S. and Mekonnen, Zeleke and Mirams, Greg and Montresor, Antonio and Oliveira, Rodrigo Corrêa and Periago, Maria V. and Pinto, Simone A. and Rinaldi, Laura and Sayasone, Somphou and Sumo, Laurentine and Tchuem-Tchuenté, Louis-Albert and Cam Thach, Dang Thi and Thomas, Eurion and Zeynudin, Ahmed and Verweij, Jaco J. and Vlaminck, Johnny and Vercruysse, Jozef. (2020) Identifying thresholds to classify moderate-to-heavy soil-transmitted helminth intensity infections for FECPAKG2, McMaster, Mini-FLOTAC and qPCR. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 14 (7). e0008296.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/77686/

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Abstract

World Health Organization (WHO) has defined moderate-to-heavy intensity (M&HI) infections with soil-transmitted helminths (Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura and the two hookworms, Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus) based on specific values of eggs per gram of stool, as measured by the Kato-Katz method. There are a variety of novel microscopy and DNA-based methods but it remains unclear whether applying current WHO thresholds on to these methods allows for a reliable classification of M&HI infections. We evaluated both WHO and method-specific thresholds for classifying the M&HI infections for novel microscopic (FECPAKG2, McMaster and Mini-FLOTAC) and DNA-based (qPCR) diagnostic methods. For this, we determined method-specific thresholds that best classified M&HI infections (defined by Kato-Katz and WHO thresholds; reference method) in two multi-country drug efficacy studies. Subsequently, we verified whether applying these method-specific thresholds improved the agreement in classifying M&HI infections compared to the reference method. When we applied the WHO thresholds, the new microscopic methods mainly misclassified M&HI as low intensity, and to a lesser extent low intensity infection as M&HI. For FECPAKG2, applying the method-specific thresholds significantly improved the agreement for Ascaris (moderate → substantial), Trichuris and hookworms (fair → moderate). For Mini-FLOTAC, a significantly improved agreement was observed for hookworms only (fair → moderate). For the other STHs, the agreement was almost perfect and remained unchanged. For McMaster, the method-specific thresholds revealed a fair to a substantial agreement but did not significantly improve the agreement. For qPCR, the method-specific thresholds based on genome equivalents per ml of DNA moderately agreed with the reference method for hookworms and Trichuris infections. For Ascaris, there was a substantial agreement. We defined method-specific thresholds that improved the classification of M&HI infections. Validation studies are required before they can be recommended for general use in assessing M&HI infections in programmatic settings.
Faculties and Departments:09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH)
09 Associated Institutions > Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH) > Department of Medical Parasitology and Infection Biology (MPI) > Helminth Drug Development (Keiser)
UniBasel Contributors:Keiser, Jennifer
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:Public Library of Science
ISSN:1935-2727
e-ISSN:1935-2735
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Identification Number:
Last Modified:10 Jul 2020 11:10
Deposited On:10 Jul 2020 11:10

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