AI Article Synopsis

  • Neurocysticercosis (NCC) is a major cause of epilepsy, particularly in immigrants in Europe, and routine serological screening in Italy targets internationally adopted children from endemic countries.
  • The analysis involved 2,973 children over 16 years, revealing a low prevalence of NCC (0.4%) among screened kids, with seropositivity not leading to most diagnoses of NCC.
  • Given the low detection rate and high costs (EUR 10,372 per detected case), the study suggests pausing serological screening for cysticercosis in Italy until more supporting evidence arises.

Article Abstract

IntroductionNeurocysticercosis (NCC) is one of the leading causes of epilepsy worldwide. The majority of cases in Europe are diagnosed in immigrants. Currently in Italy, routine serological screening for cysticercosis is recommended for internationally adopted children (IAC) coming from endemic countries. We retrospectively analyse the results of the serological screening for cysticercosis in IAC 16 years old or younger, attending two Italian third level paediatric clinics in 2001-16. Of 2,973 children included in the study, 2,437 (82.0%) were screened by enzyme-linked immune electro transfer blot (EITB), 1,534 (51.6%) by ELISA, and 998 (33.6%) by both tests. The seroprevalence of cysticercosis ranged between 1.7% and 8.9% according to EITB and ELISA, respectively. Overall, 13 children were diagnosed with NCC accounting for a NCC frequency of 0.4% (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.2-0.6%). Among the 168 seropositive children, only seven (4.2%) were diagnosed with NCC. Of these children, three were asymptomatic and four presented epilepsy. Among seronegative children (n = 2,805), seven presented with neurological symptoms that lead to the diagnosis of NCC in six cases. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value for the diagnosis of NCC were 54.5%, 98.6%, 14.6%, 99.8% for EITB and 22.2%, 91.1%, 1.4%, 99.5% for ELISA. The yield of the screening programme was 437 NCC cases per 100,000. The number needed to screen to detect one NCC case was 228. The cost per NCC case detected was EUR 10,372. On the base of our findings we suggest the ongoing serological screening for cysticercosis to be discontinued, at least in Italy, until further evidence in support will be available.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6178589PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2018.23.40.1700709DOI Listing

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