25 research outputs found
Sensitive Detection of Plasmodium vivax Using a High-Throughput, Colourimetric Loop Mediated Isothermal Amplification (HtLAMP) Platform: A Potential Novel Tool for Malaria Elimination.
INTRODUCTION: Plasmodium vivax malaria has a wide geographic distribution and poses challenges to malaria elimination that are likely to be greater than those of P. falciparum. Diagnostic tools for P. vivax infection in non-reference laboratory settings are limited to microscopy and rapid diagnostic tests but these are unreliable at low parasitemia. The development and validation of a high-throughput and sensitive assay for P. vivax is a priority. METHODS: A high-throughput LAMP assay targeting a P. vivax mitochondrial gene and deploying colorimetric detection in a 96-well plate format was developed and evaluated in the laboratory. Diagnostic accuracy was compared against microscopy, antigen detection tests and PCR and validated in samples from malaria patients and community controls in a district hospital setting in Sabah, Malaysia. RESULTS: The high throughput LAMP-P. vivax assay (HtLAMP-Pv) performed with an estimated limit of detection of 1.4 parasites/ ÎŒL. Assay primers demonstrated cross-reactivity with P. knowlesi but not with other Plasmodium spp. Field testing of HtLAMP-Pv was conducted using 149 samples from symptomatic malaria patients (64 P. vivax, 17 P. falciparum, 56 P. knowlesi, 7 P. malariae, 1 mixed P. knowlesi/P. vivax, with 4 excluded). When compared against multiplex PCR, HtLAMP-Pv demonstrated a sensitivity for P. vivax of 95% (95% CI 87-99%); 61/64), and specificity of 100% (95% CI 86-100%); 25/25) when P. knowlesi samples were excluded. HtLAMP-Pv testing of 112 samples from asymptomatic community controls, 7 of which had submicroscopic P. vivax infections by PCR, showed a sensitivity of 71% (95% CI 29-96%; 5/7) and specificity of 93% (95% CI87-97%; 98/105). CONCLUSION: This novel HtLAMP-P. vivax assay has the potential to be a useful field applicable molecular diagnostic test for P. vivax infection in elimination settings
A research agenda for malaria eradication: vaccines.
Contains fulltext :
97591.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Vaccines could be a crucial component of efforts to eradicate malaria. Current
attempts to develop malaria vaccines are primarily focused on Plasmodium
falciparum and are directed towards reducing morbidity and mortality. Continued
support for these efforts is essential, but if malaria vaccines are to be used as
part of a repertoire of tools for elimination or eradication of malaria, they
will need to have an impact on malaria transmission. We introduce the concept of
"vaccines that interrupt malaria transmission" (VIMT), which includes not only
"classical" transmission-blocking vaccines that target the sexual and mosquito
stages but also pre-erythrocytic and asexual stage vaccines that have an effect
on transmission. VIMT may also include vaccines that target the vector to disrupt
parasite development in the mosquito. Importantly, if eradication is to be
achieved, malaria vaccine development efforts will need to target other malaria
parasite species, especially Plasmodium vivax, where novel therapeutic vaccines
against hypnozoites or preventive vaccines with effect against multiple stages
could have enormous impact. A target product profile (TPP) for VIMT is proposed
and a research agenda to address current knowledge gaps and develop tools
necessary for design and development of VIMT is presented