Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10030667 | Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The PCR-ELISA represents a promising advance for diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in blood samples. However, the method has been validated mostly with HIV-positive patients who are known to have high levels of parasitaemia. We developed a new PCR-ELISA assay for specific detection of Leishmania in patients' blood and validated it in Nepalese subjects with clinically suspected VL, almost all of whom were HIV-negative. For blood samples, PCR-ELISA was more sensitive (83.9%) than conventional PCR (73.2%), and demonstrated 100% and 87.2% specificity when using healthy controls who had never travelled to a VL-endemic area and controls from a VL-endemic area as references, respectively. We have demonstrated the ability of PCR-ELISA to detect parasites in blood of HIV-negative patients. The method could be used for epidemiological as well as clinical purposes, as it reduces the need for traumatic bone marrow sampling and risky spleen aspiration.
Keywords
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Authors
Simonne De Doncker, Veronik Hutse, Saïd Abdellati, Suman Rijal, Bal Man Singh Karki, Saskia Decuypere, Diane Jacquet, Dominique Le Ray, Marleen Boelaert, Shekhar Koirala, Jean-Claude Dujardin,