AI Article Synopsis

  • Malaria during pregnancy can be very harmful, so it's important to quickly and correctly diagnose it.
  • In Burkina Faso, a study of 418 pregnant women showed that rapid diagnostic tests (RDT) are better at finding malaria than microscopy, but both can miss it sometimes, especially when there’s a low amount of the parasite in the blood.
  • The study found some changes in the malaria genes (called deletions) that might affect how well the tests work, and suggested that more research is needed to understand these issues better.

Article Abstract

Malaria in pregnancy causes adverse consequences and prompt and accurate diagnosis is essential for case management. In malaria endemic countries, diagnosis is mainly based on rapid diagnostic tests (RDT) and microscopy. However, increasing reports of false negatives caused by low parasitemia and deletions raise concerns about HRP2-based RDT usefulness. This study aimed to assess RDT and microscopy performance and to describe deletions in a cohort of 418 pregnant women in Burkina Faso. Malaria was diagnosed using RDT and microscopy and blood samples were collected during antenatal care visits. Diagnostic results were compared to PCR as gold standard. and deletions were characterized for patients with confirmed infection. RDT had better sensitivity (76%) but lower specificity (83%) than microscopy (sensitivity = 57%; specificity = 98%). Low parasitemia (<150 parasites/µL), especially in multigravidae, was the principal factor causing false negatives by both methods. Moreover, deletion frequency among overall false negatives by RDT was 21.43%. Higher frequency of deletions was found among all samples, independently of RDT result, for example around 2% of samples had double deletions meaning that the majority of deletions had no effect on RDT testing. Finally, it was found higher deletion in women with lower uterine height during the first trimester. Wider and National surveillance study of deletions is recommended among pregnant women and in Burkina Faso.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11441055PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20477724.2024.2388489DOI Listing

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