Persistence of anti-Salmonella O9 IgM as measured by Tubex® TF may contribute to the over-diagnosis of typhoid fever in endemic areas

Background: Diagnosing typhoid fever definitively, using bone-marrow, blood or feces culture is either invasive, time-consuming, expensive, or complicated. Hence, clinicians often use clinical presentations and/or rapid diagnostic methods to examine the indirect evidence of Salmonella typhi infectio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBali medical journal Vol. 11; no. 1; pp. 11 - 17
Main Authors Pranata, I Wayan Adi, Diana, Aly, Heryanto, Marco R, Lukman, Nurhayati, Kosasih, Herman, Djauhari, Hofiya, Butarbutar, Deni PR, Widjaja, Susana, Alisjahbana, Bachti
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 30.01.2022
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2089-1180
2302-2914
DOI10.15562/bmj.v11i1.3035

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Background: Diagnosing typhoid fever definitively, using bone-marrow, blood or feces culture is either invasive, time-consuming, expensive, or complicated. Hence, clinicians often use clinical presentations and/or rapid diagnostic methods to examine the indirect evidence of Salmonella typhi infections. This study describes the proportion of typhoid fever, challenges of diagnosing typhoid fever, and the kinetics of anti-Salmonella O9 IgM. Methods: During a prospective dengue study in Bandung, Indonesia, 1,431 febrile occurrences were observed among 2,978 adult volunteers over a four-year period. As typhoid fever is endemic and represents a major cause of febrile illness in this study area, acute- and convalescent-phase sera from 964 subjects that had been excluded for dengue and chikungunya infections, were tested with Tubex® TF. To observe the kinetics of anti-Salmonella O9 IgM, we tested sequential sera up to 260 days post-illness from 3 subjects.   Results: Based on Tubex® TF, 71 of 964 (7.4%) subjects had anti-Salmonella O9 IgM (score≥4) in their convalescent sera. Anti-Salmonella O9 IgM scores in convalescent sera increased compared to the acute sera in 36 subjects, indicating probable acute typhoid fever. The convalescent scores decreased/remained the same as acute sera in the other 35 subjects, which more likely indicating previous S. typhi infections. Using serially collected sera, it was determined that anti-Salmonella O9 IgM could be detected for a long period after illness. Conclusion: Tubex® TF test should be conducted using paired acute- and convalescent-phase sera to reduce the chance of false positive result that may due to long-lasting anti-Salmonella O9 IgM.
ISSN:2089-1180
2302-2914
DOI:10.15562/bmj.v11i1.3035