Novel paradigm enables accurate monthly gestational screening to prevent congenital toxoplasmosis and more
Creators
- Zhou, Ying1
- Leahy, Karen1
- Grose, Andrew1
- Lykins, Joseph1
- Siddiqui, Maryam1
- Leong, Nicole1
- Goodall, Perpetua1
- Withers, Shawn1
- Ashi, Kevin1
- Schrantz, Stephen1
- Tesic, Vera1
- Abeleda, Ana Precy1
- Beavis, Kathleen1
- Clouser, Fatima1
- Ismail, Mahmoud1
- Christmas, Monica1
- Piarroux, Raphael2
- Limmone, Denis2
- Chapey, Emmanuelle3
- Abraham, Sylvia4
- Baird, Isabelle1
- Thibodeau, Juliette1
-
McLeod, Rima1
- 1. University of Chicago
- 2. LDBIO Diagnostics
- 3. Hôpital de la Croix-Rousse
- 4. Bichat-Claude Bernard Hôpital
Description
Background: Congenital toxoplasmosis is a treatable, preventable disease, but untreated causes death, prematurity, loss of sight, cognition and motor function, and substantial costs worldwide.
Objectives: We asked whether high performance of an Immunochromatographic-test (ICT) could enable accurate, rapid diagnosis/treatment, establishing new, improved care-paradigms at point-of-care and clinical laboratory.
Methods: Data were obtained in 12 studies/analyses addressing: 1-feasibility/efficacy; 2-false-positives; 3-acceptability; 4-pink/black-line/all studies; 5-time/cost; 6-Quick-Information/Limit-of-detection; 7, 8-acute;-chronic; 9-epidemiology; 10-ADBio; 11,12-Commentary/Cases/Chronology.
Findings: ICT was compared with gold-standard or predicate-tests. Overall, ICT performance for 1093 blood/4967 sera was 99.2%/97.5% sensitive and 99.0%/99.7% specific. However, in clinical trial, FDA-cleared-predicate tests initially caused practical, costly problems due to false-positive-IgM results. For 58 persons, 3/43 seronegative and 2/15 chronically infected persons had false positive IgM predicate tests. This caused substantial anxiety, concerns, and required costly, delayed confirmation in reference centers. Absence of false positive ICT results contributes to solutions: Lyon and Paris France and USA Reference laboratories frequently receive sera with erroneously positive local laboratory IgM results impeding patient care. Therefore, thirty-two such sera referred to Lyon's Reference laboratory were ICT-tested. We collated these with other earlier/ongoing results: 132 of 137 USA or French persons had false-positive local laboratory IgM results identified correctly as negative by ICT. Five false positive ICT results in Tunisia and Marseille, France, emphasize need to confirm positive ICT results with Sabin-Feldman-Dye-test or western blot. Separate studies demonstrated high performance in detecting acute infections, meeting FDA, CLIA, WHO REASSURED, CEMark criteria and patient and physician satisfaction with monthly-gestational-ICT-screening.
Conclusions/significance: This novel paradigm using ICT identifies likely false positives or raises suspicion that a result is truly positive, rapidly needing prompt follow up and treatment. Thus, ICT enables well-accepted gestational screening programs that facilitate rapid treatment saving lives, sight, cognition and motor function. This reduces anxiety, delays, work, and cost at point-of-care and clinical laboratories.
Trial registration: NCT04474132, https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04474132
Notes
Data availability
The authors confirm that all data underlying the findings are fully available without restriction. All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.Files
journal.pntd.0011335.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pntd.0011335
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:12088
Funding
- National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
- T35DK062719-30
- National Institutes of Health
- Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases Grant
- National Institutes of Health
- RO1 16945
- National Institutes of Health
- AI08749-01A1 BIOL-3
- National Institutes of Health
- U01 AI77887
- National Institutes of Health
- U01 AI082180
- National Institutes of Health
- TMP R01- AI071319
- National Institutes of Health
- Thrasher Children's Charity
- “Al” Thrasher Award
- Kiphart Global-Local Health
- Seed Fund Award
- University of Chicago
- Provost Award for Latin America and the Carribean