Abstract

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has placed twenty diseases into a group known as neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), twelve of them being parasitic diseases: Chagas’ disease, cysticercosis/taeniasis, echinococcosis, food-borne trematodiasis, human African trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness), leishmaniasis, lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis (river blindness), schistosomiasis, soil-transmitted helminthiasis (ascariasis, hookworm, trichuriasis), guinea-worm and scabies. Such diseases affect millions of people in developing countries where one of the main problems concerning the control of these diseases is diagnosis-based due to the most affected areas usually being far from laboratories having suitable infrastructure and/or being equipped with sophisticated equipment. Advances have been made during the last two decades regarding standardising and introducing techniques enabling diagnoses to be made in remote places, i.e., the loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) technique. This technique’s advantages include being able to perform it using simple equipment, diagnosis made directly in the field, low cost of each test and the technique’s high specificity. Using this technique could thus contribute toward neglected parasite infection (NPI) control and eradication programmes. This review describes the advances made to date regarding LAMP tests, as it has been found that even though several studies have been conducted concerning most NPI, information is scarce for others.

Highlights

  • Neglected tropical diseases (NTD) can usually be taken as an indicator of extreme poverty

  • An amplification method known as loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) reaction has been developed for overcoming such limitations; this test combines speed, simplicity, high specificity and high sensitivity since LAMP’s detection limit reaches up to few copies of DNA compared to Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

  • This review describes the state of the art concerning LAMP, a technique which has been developed for facilitating diagnosis in the field of parasites which the World Health Organisation (WHO) has classified within the NTD group

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Summary

Introduction

Neglected tropical diseases (NTD) can usually be taken as an indicator of extreme poverty. An amplification method known as loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) reaction has been developed for overcoming such limitations; this test combines speed, simplicity, high specificity and high sensitivity since LAMP’s detection limit reaches up to few copies of DNA compared to PCR. It requires less specialised equipment and infrastructure [6,7,8]. At the time of writing this review, few biomarkers had been tested for LAMP (Table 1; Table 2), even though its sensitivity had been better than that obtained by other techniques (including PCR amplification), having provided good results regarding samples from naturally-infected patients. Diagnosing Chagas’ disease continues being a priority and needs to be improved

18 S rRNA 18 S rRNA 18 S rRNA
Echinococcosis
Foodborne Trematodiases
15 Sheep:39 Cattle
Leishmaniasis
Lymphatic Filariasis
10. Scabies
11. Schistosomiasis
Findings
14. Conclusions
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