Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is a vector-borne parasitic disease, routinely diagnosed by direct light microscopy. The sensitivity of this method is dependent on the number of parasites present in the lesion. Immunoexpression of CD1a surface antigen by amastigotes and its application as a diagnostic tool has been recently demonstrated in several species including , and . is the only reported species in Sri Lanka primarily causing CL and its CD1a status remains unexplored. We studied CD1a expression by amastigotes of in skin biopsies from 116 patients with suspected CL. The biopsy sections were stained with CD1a clones O10 and MTB1 separately. Slit skin smear (SSS) results were considered the gold standard for diagnosis of CL. 103 cases were confirmed through SSS where 73 of them showed positive parasite staining for CD1a clone MTB1 with 70.9% sensitivity. Positivity was seen mostly in parasites closer to the epidermis. CD1a clone O10 failed to detect any amastigotes. Test sensitivity improved to 74.1% when the analysis was applied only to patients with low/no discernible Leishman-Donovan (LD) bodies in histology. Our findings show that CD1a clone MTB1 successfully stains amastigotes of species and can be used as a supplementary diagnostic tool in detecting CL, especially when LD bodies are low in number. This method could be validated to detect other forms of leishmaniasis caused by in Indian and sub-Saharan regions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0031182024000799 | DOI Listing |
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