Abstract
This study evaluated the performance of three diagnostic methods for cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL). Patients who came to the Health Center Laboratory of Gonbad-e-Qabus in Golestan Province, Iran, were enrolled in the study. Skin scraping smear, improved microculture (IMC) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were performed. A total of 303 subjects were recruited, among whom 273 subjects fulfilled the criteria for CL. Sensitivity and specificity were 88.8% (95% CI=84.2-92.2%) and 100.0% for smears, 98.4% (95% CI=96.1-99.1%) and 100.0% for IMC, both of them 100.0% for PCR. Although, PCR was relatively more sensitive than the IMC, the high correlation (agreement=96%, Kappa=0.82) between IMC and PCR along with the advantages of simplicity, rapidity, adequate sensitivity and as a needle free method, offers the IMC as a valuable alternative diagnostic method for PCR in diagnosis of CL.
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