Title: Lab Diagnosis of Malaria Parasites
1Lab Diagnosis of Malaria Parasites
2Diagnosis of malaria
- Prompt and accurate diagnosis is the key
- Two diagnostic approaches
- Clinical diagnosis,
- Microscopic diagnosis, DIFFICULT
- Need for accurate and rapid diagnosis method
- RDTs comparable to those generally achieved by
microscopy
3Diagnostic Toolsfor Human Infections with Malaria
- Blood film examination
- Serology - IFA
- PCR
4Microscopy advantages
- Sensitive. As low as 510 parasites per µl of
blood typical microscopist might be more
realistically placed at 100 parasites per µl of
blood - Informative. species and of the circulating
stage, quantifications - Inexpensive.
- Permanent record (the smears)
5Microscopy disadvantages
- Labour-intensive and time -consuming,
- Unreliable tool
- Long delays
6Types of Serological Assays Malaria
Antigen Detection Immunochromatographic Antibody
Detection Indirect Fluorescent Antibody Enzyme
immunoassays
7Antigen Detection
8Antigen Detection
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11Antigen DetectionMalaria Immunochromatographic
Dipstick
OptiMAL Assay
P. falciparum specific monoclonal antibody
Control
Plasmodium pan specific monoclonal antibody
12Antigen DetectionMalaria Immunochromatographic
DipstickProblems
- Low sensitivity with parasites density lt100/ml
13RDT disdvantages
- lack of sensitivity at low levels of
parasitaemia - inability to quantify parasite density
- inability to differentiate between P. vivax, P.
ovale and P. malariae, - Inability to differentiate between the sexual and
asexual stages of the parasite - persistently positive tests (for some antigens)
in spite of parasite clearance following
chemotherapy - Relatively high cost per test.
14Antigens
- Histidine-rich protein II ( HRP-II) is a
water-soluble protein produced by trophozoites
and young (but not mature) gametocytes of P.
falciparum. - Parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) is produced
by asexual and sexual stages (gametocytes) of
malaria parasites. cannot distinguish between P.
vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae. - Other antigen that are present in all four
species are also targeted in kits that combine
detection of the HRP-II antigen of P. falciparum
together with that of an, as yet unspecified,
pan-malarial antigen of the other species.
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16Antibody Detection
17Antibody Detection
18Other tests
- Microscopy using fluorochromes such as acridine
orange, either on blood smears (34) or on
centrifuged blood specimens (QBC technique) is
expensive and requires special equipment and
supplies (centrifuge and centrifuge tubes,
special light sources and filters). - PCR s more sensitive and specific than all other
techniques. It is, however, a lengthy procedure
that requires specialized and costly equipment
and reagents, as well as laboratory conditions
that are often not available in the field.
19Indirect Fluorescent Antibody (IFA)
Microscope slide
20Malaria IFA Test
- Sensitivity 98
- Specificity 99.5
- Sulzer et al, Am J Trop Med Hyg 196918199-205
- Sulzer et al, Bull Wld Hlth Org 197145375-379
21P. malariae
22P. malariae
23P. malariae
24P. falciparum
25P. falciparum
26P. falciparum
27Malaria IFA TestInitial detection of antibodies
- Parasitemia precedes antibody
- P. vivax 2-6 days
- P. falciparum and P. malariae 4-6 days
- If parasitemia is suppressed by treatment, may
develop detectable antibody
28Malaria IFA TestDetermination of Infecting
Species
- Non-Immune
- Samples drawn 0-14 days post onset Highest titer
was to the infecting species in 81 - Samples drawn 15-60 days post onset Highest
titer was to the infecting species in 96
29Malaria IFA TestDetermination of Infecting
Species
- Is possible in non-immune individuals with
primary infection. - Is NOT possible in immune individuals because
their antibody response reflects multiple
infections with multiple species.
30Malaria IFA TestAntibody Persistence after
Treatment
- Non-Immunes (Vietnam Vets with Pv)
-
- 53 IFA negative at 6 mo. post-Rx
- 59 IFA negative at 12 mo. post-Rx
-
- Wilson et al, Am J Trop Med Hyg 197019401-404
31Malaria IFA TestAntibody Persistence
32Sensitivity of Tools forDiagnosis of Malarial
Infection
- Most sensitive
- Antibody detection
- 2. PCR
- Blood film examination
- RDT antigen dtection
33Diagnosis of Untreated Acute Malaria
- Blood film examination
- PCR
- RDT antigen based
34Diagnosis of Treated Recent Malaria
- Serology
- Blood film examination
- PCR
35Diagnosis of Chronic Malaria
- Screen with serology
- If IFA positive
- May do blood film examination
- May do PCR
36HRP2 antigen sensitivity
37RDT advantages
38Need for future
- Develop methods that permit quantification of
parasite density with RDTs. - Develop improved tests that reflect viable
asexual parasitaemia only. - Identify potential markers that predict the
development of complications, treatment outcomes
and/or drug resistance. - Identify the gold standard against which
malaria diagnostic tests should be assessed.