High-Throughput Pooling and Real-Time PCR-Based Strategy for Malaria Detection

Molecular assays can provide critical information for malaria diagnosis, speciation, and drug resistance, but their cost and resource requirements limit their application to clinical malaria studies. This study describes the application of a resource-conserving testing algorithm employing sample poo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Clinical Microbiology Vol. 48; no. 2; pp. 512 - 519
Main Authors Taylor, Steve M, Juliano, Jonathan J, Trottman, Paul A, Griffin, Jennifer B, Landis, Sarah H, Kitsa, Paluku, Tshefu, Antoinette K, Meshnick, Steven R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington, DC American Society for Microbiology 01.02.2010
American Society for Microbiology (ASM)
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Molecular assays can provide critical information for malaria diagnosis, speciation, and drug resistance, but their cost and resource requirements limit their application to clinical malaria studies. This study describes the application of a resource-conserving testing algorithm employing sample pooling for real-time PCR assays for malaria in a cohort of 182 pregnant women in Kinshasa. A total of 1,268 peripheral blood samples were collected during the study. Using a real-time PCR assay that detects all Plasmodium species, microscopy-positive samples were amplified individually; the microscopy-negative samples were amplified after pooling the genomic DNA (gDNA) of four samples prior to testing. Of 176 microscopy-positive samples, 74 were positive by the real-time PCR assay; the 1,092 microscopy-negative samples were initially amplified in 293 pools, and subsequently, 35 samples were real-time PCR positive (3%). With the real-time PCR result as the referent standard, microscopy was 67.9% sensitive (95% confidence interval [CI], 58.3% to 76.5%) and 91.2% specific (95% CI, 89.4% to 92.8%) for malaria. In total, we detected 109 parasitemias by real-time PCR and, by pooling samples, obviated over 50% of reactions and halved the cost of testing. Our study highlights both substantial discordance between malaria diagnostics and the utility and parsimony of employing a sample pooling strategy for molecular diagnostics in clinical and epidemiologic malaria studies.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
Present address: Oncology Biometrics & Epidemiology, GlaxoSmithKline, Stockley Park, United Kingdom.
ISSN:0095-1137
1098-660X
DOI:10.1128/JCM.01800-09