Publication | Open Access
EVALUATION OF A NEW RECOMBINANT K39 RAPID DIAGNOSTIC TEST FOR SUDANESE VISCERAL LEISHMANIASIS
93
Citations
26
References
2006
Year
MalariaImmunologyDiagnosisPathologyDisease DetectionVisceral LeishmaniasisDiagnostic TestClinical EpidemiologySerologic TestingPublic HealthLaboratory MedicineParasitologyDipstick TestParasitic ProtozoaSudanese Visceral LeishmaniasisEpidemiologyRk39 TestMolecular Diagnostic TechniquesMedicine
A new rK39 rapid diagnostic dipstick test (DiaMed-IT-Leish) was compared with aspiration and a direct agglutination test (DAT) for diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in 201 parasitologically confirmed cases, 133 endemic controls, and in 356 clinical suspects in disease-endemic and -epidemic areas in Sudan. The sensitivity of the rK39 test in parasitologically confirmed VL cases was 90%, whereas the specificity in disease-endemic controls was 99%. The sensitivity of the DAT was 98%. In clinically suspected cases, the sensitivity of the rK39 test was 81% and the specificity was 97%. When compared with the diagnostic protocol based on the DAT and aspiration used by Médecins sans Frontières in epidemic situations, the positive predictive value was 98%, and the negative predictive value was 71%. This rK39 rapid diagnostic test is suitable for screening as well as diagnosis of VL. Further diagnostic work-up of dipstick-negative patients with clinically suspected VL is important. The ease and convenience of the dipstick test will allow decentralization and improved access to care in disease-endemic areas in Sudan.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1