Abstract

BackgroundKato-Katz examination of stool smears is the field-standard method for detecting Schistosoma mansoni infection. However, Kato-Katz misses many active infections, especially of light intensity. Point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen (CCA) is an alternative field diagnostic that is more sensitive than Kato-Katz when intensity is low, but interpretation of CCA-trace results is unclear. To evaluate trace results, we tested urine and stool specimens from 398 pupils from eight schools in Burundi using four approaches: two in Burundi and two in a laboratory in Leiden, the Netherlands. In Burundi, we used Kato-Katz and point-of-care CCA (CCAB). In Leiden, we repeated the CCA (CCAL) and also used Up-Converting Phosphor Circulating Anodic Antigen (CAA).MethodsWe applied Bayesian latent class analyses (LCA), first considering CCA traces as negative and then as positive. We used the LCA output to estimate validity of the prevalence estimates of each test in comparison to the population-level infection prevalence and estimated the proportion of trace results that were likely true positives.ResultsKato-Katz yielded the lowest prevalence (6.8%), and CCAB with trace considered positive yielded the highest (53.5%). There were many more trace results recorded by CCA in Burundi (32.4%) than in Leiden (2.3%). Estimated prevalence with CAA was 46.5%. LCA indicated that Kato-Katz had the lowest sensitivity: 15.9% [Bayesian Credible Interval (BCI): 9.2–23.5%] with CCA-trace considered negative and 15.0% with trace as positive (BCI: 9.6–21.4%), implying that Kato-Katz missed approximately 85% of infections. CCAB underestimated disease prevalence when trace was considered negative and overestimated disease prevalence when trace was considered positive, by approximately 12 percentage points each way, and CAA overestimated prevalence in both models. Our results suggest that approximately 52.2% (BCI: 37.8–5.8%) of the CCAB trace readings were true infections.ConclusionsWhether measured in the laboratory or the field, CCA outperformed Kato-Katz at the low infection intensities in Burundi. CCA with trace as negative likely missed many infections, whereas CCA with trace as positive overestimated prevalence. In the absence of a field-friendly gold standard diagnostic, the use of a variety of diagnostics with differing properties will become increasingly important as programs move towards elimination of schistosomiasis. It is clear that CCA is a valuable tool for the detection and mapping of S. mansoni infection in the field and CAA may be a valuable field tool in the future.

Highlights

  • Kato-Katz examination of stool smears is the field-standard method for detecting Schistosoma mansoni infection

  • The most striking difference between cathodic antigen (CCA) results in Burundi and Leiden were the number of trace results recorded: almost one-third (32.4%) of children tested in Burundi were recorded as trace by CCA compared to only 2.3% in Leiden

  • Proportion of trace results truly positive Our model suggests that 95.8% (BCI: 89.4–99.6%) of the positive CCA performed in Burundi (CCAB) results were truly infection positive when CCA trace was considered as negative (Table 4, Fig. 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Kato-Katz examination of stool smears is the field-standard method for detecting Schistosoma mansoni infection. Point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen (CCA) is an alternative field diagnostic that is more sensitive than Kato-Katz when intensity is low, but interpretation of CCA-trace results is unclear. The standard field method of detecting Schistosoma mansoni is through Kato-Katz (KK) testing, in which patient stool samples are examined by microscopy for parasite eggs [1, 2]. This method is well known to miss some infections, especially those of light intensity [3]. Whether faint ‘trace’ results should be considered as negative or positive has been questioned [9,10,11]

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