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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 2004, p. 4237-4241, Vol. 42, No. 9
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.9.4237-4241.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait,1 District Health Center, Punjab, Pakistan2
Received 14 February 2004/ Returned for modification 21 April 2004/ Accepted 31 May 2004
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The ICT Malaria Pf/Pv test is based on the use of HRP2 antigen to detect P. falciparum infection and a panmalarial antigen to detect Plasmodium vivax infection (7-9). In the present study, we evaluated the performance of the ICT Malaria Pf/Pv and OptiMAL-IT assays to detect persistent antigenemia after antimalarial therapy by using ICT assays in Punjab and Kuwait.
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The majority of malaria patients enrolled for the study were young adults from areas of malaria endemicity of Punjab reporting at the Health Centers and immigrants reporting at the District Health Centers in Kuwait (7). The mean age of patients was 21 years (range, 9 to 46 years) from both sexes, and the majority of them were from Southeast Asian countries. The majority of the patients had a history of malarial infections. The patients were treated either with a standardized supervised 3-day regimen of oral chloroquine (10 mg of base/kg of body weight on days 1 and 2 and 5 mg/kg on day 3) or quinine (500 mg every 8 h for 3 or 7 days) if they were infected in regions where the chloroquine-resistant strains were documented.
For each patient, a finger prick was made, and 50 µl of blood was collected in a preheparinized Eppendorf tube for ICT Malaria Pf/Pv test and OptiMAL-IT assay and thick/thin blood smear for Giemsa-microscopy. All specimens were coded, and the microscopists and the ICT readers were blinded to each other and to the outcome of chemotherapy.
Clinical evaluation, parasitemia, and ICT antigen testing were performed on days 0, 3, 7, and 14. Informed consent to participate in the study was obtained from participants and the Ethical Committee of the local Health Division approved the study.
Microscopy of Giemsa-stained blood films. Thick and thin blood films were stained with 10% Giemsa stain for 10 min and examined by two experienced microscopists who had no knowledge of patient disease status or nationality to avoid any bias in blood film readings. Asexual- and sexual-stage parasite densities were counted per 200 leukocytes and were then expressed in microliters, assuming a leukocyte count of 8,000/µl (7, 14, 15). Thick films were considered negative if no parasites were seen in at least 100 consecutive oil immersion fields.
ICT Malaria Pf/Pv test. This is a rapid, in vitro immunodiagnostic test for the detection of circulating P. falciparum HRP2 and an antigen common to all four species of malaria, panmalarial antigen (PMA), in whole blood. The test uses two specific monoclonal antibodies that have been immobilized across the test strip. The test was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions (Now ICT MALARIA; Binax, Inc., Portland, Maine). Briefly, 15 µl of whole blood was added to a sample pad impregnated with colloidal gold-labeled antibodies to the malarial antigens. The blood sample was allowed to run up the full length of the strip after the addition of buffer A. The result was read after 10 min. The test was valid only if the control line was observed. The results were interpreted as follows: P. falciparum infection was indicated by a line next to the P. falciparum HRP2 antigen mark; P. falciparum infection or a mixed infection was indicated by a line next to the HRP2 antigen and the PMA marks; a mixed infection of all three or P. vivax, P. ovale, or P. malariae was indicated by a line next to the PMA mark only. A limitation of this test is that it cannot speciate P. falciparum mixed infections.
OptiMAL-IT assay. The OptiMAL-IT assay is based on the detection of intact and functional pLDH specific for P. falciparum and pan-pLDH (PMA), an antigen that is common to all four species of malaria, in whole blood. The test uses two monoclonal antibodies that have been immobilized across the test strip. The assay was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions (DiaMed AG, Cressier, Switzerland). Briefly, 1 drop of whole blood was mixed with 2 drops of lysis buffer A, which disrupts the red blood cells and releases pLDH, and the specimens were allowed to migrate to the top of the strip. After 8 min, the strips was placed in washing buffer B that cleared the hemoglobin from the strip. In the pLDH assay there are two diagnostic zones of reaction containing monoclonal anti-pLDH and PMA. The anti-pLDH antibody that recognizes only P. falciparum is present in the bottom reaction zone, and the PMA is present immediately above this zone. A third reaction zone containing a pan-specific monoclonal antibody is present at the top of the test strip and serves as a positive control for the assay.
Statistical analysis. Data were collected and analyzed by using the SPSS statistical program. ICT antigen test results were considered FP if they were positive for HRP2, pLDH, or PMA but negative for asexual-stage parasites microscopically with or without gametocytes on days 0, 3, 7, and 14 after therapy. The percent ratio of persistent antigen reactivity was expressed as a proportion of the total FP cases, i.e., antigen positive but microscopy negative, and the total patients, i.e., 229 admitted with P. falciparum monoinfection, for each antigen tested on follow-up.
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All 240 patients were screened for antigenemia with the ICT Malaria Pf/Pv assay at the time of admission (day 0). All 240 patients showed positive reactivity with the ICT assay; 216 (90%) showed reactivity for HRP2 antigen, and 83 (34.6%) reacted positively for PMA. The majority of patients 157 (65.4%) were positive for HRP2 antigen only (Fig. 1A). On day 3 after antimalarial therapy, 11 of the 240 patients were positive for asexual-stage peripheral parasitemia on microscopy and thus were not followed up further for persistent antigenemia. Of the 229 cases with negative parasitemia on day 3, persistent antigenemia was documented in 207 (90.4%) of the cases; 188 (82.1%) for HRP2 and 75 (32.8%) for PMA. There was a gradual decrease in the number of cases that reacted for both and/or either of the antigens on follow-up to day 14; however, the drop in reactivity to PMA was less than that for HRP2 antigen. The persistent antigenemia was observed in 62.4% (HRP2) and 30.1% (PMA) on day 7; the level of antigenemia dropped further to 34.9 and 19.7%, respectively, on day 14 (Fig. 1A). The difference in the percent decrease in HRP2 and PMA reactivity after therapy was significant (31% versus 13% on day 7 [P < 0.04] and 60% versus 43% on day 14 [P < 0.05], respectively). The proportionate reactivity for both antigens on follow-up is shown in Fig. 1A.
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FIG. 1. Percentage of cases with antigenemia as detected by ICT Malaria Pf/Pv assay (A) and OptiMAL-IT assay (B) on days 0, 3, 7, and 14 after antimalarial therapy. The cases were negative for asexual-stage parasites by microscopy of Giemsa-stained blood films. The ratio was expressed as the number of cases with persistent antigenemia for each antigen to the total number of cases (i.e., 229) negative for asexual-stage parasitemia.
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In order to investigate the relationship between gametocytes and antigen persistence after treatment, all cases with gametocytes were also enrolled irrespective of their antigen reactivity status. A total of 27 of 229 (12%) cases were determined to be positive for gametocytes only by microscopy. The ICT Malaria Pf/Pv assay detected antigenemia in 16 (59.3%) cases (HRP2) and in 19 (70.1%) cases (PMA) on day 0 (Fig. 2). One case with gametocytemia was negative for both the antigens. There was no significant drop in antigenemia on follow-up to day 14 (Fig. 2). Very few cases with gametocytes showed reactivity for pLDH (five cases) and PMA (two cases) when tested with the OptiMAL-IT assay on day 0. On day 7 only one case showed reactivity for pLDH.
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FIG. 2. Relationship between gametocytemia and HRP2/PMA antigenemia. The cases were negative for asexual-stage parasites and positive for gametocytes by microscopy. The data present the numbers of cases with gametocytemia for each antigen on days 0, 3, 7, and 14 after antimalarial treatment.
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HRP2 antigen has been shown to persist and is detectable after clinical symptoms of malaria have disappeared and the parasites have apparently been cleared from the circulation (11, 17). Humar et al. detected circulating HRP2 antigen in 68% of treated malaria patients on day 7 and in 27% of treated malaria patients on day 28 (6). Tjitra et al. documented persistent FP antigenemia after antimalarial therapy in 29% (HRP2) and 42% (PMA) of patients on day 7 and in 10% (HRP2) and 23% (PMA) of patients on day 14 (16). However, in the present study we observed persistent antigenemia in 62.4% of cases (HRP2) and in 30.1% (PMA) of cases on day 7; the antigenemia levels dropped to 34.9% (HRP2) and 19.7% (PMA) on day 14. We observed more cases with persistent HRP2 antigenemia than reported earlier (6, 16, 17). We also documented here the proportionate persistent antigen reactivity for HRP2 and/or PMA. We documented antigenemia in a significantly higher number of patients with parasitemia 65.4% (HRP2) and 10% (PMA). Furthermore, the drop in reactivity to PMA was less evident than that for HRP2 antigen on follow-up to day 14.
The causes of persistent antigenemia after malaria therapy are unclear. Potential causes include persistent viable asexual-stage parasitemia below the detection limit of microscopy, delayed clearance of circulating antigen (free or in antigen-antibody complex) (16), rheumatoid factor (13), and detection of circulating sexual stages in convalescence (4, 16). Furthermore, the action of antimalarial treatment on the parasites may also influence the persistence of HRP2. Eisen and Saul studied posttreatment response in P. falciparum malaria patients admitted to the Royal Brisbane Hospital (Australia) and found that HRP2 levels never disappeared during the study period despite clearance of visible parasites (3). Karbwang et al. also detected persistent HRP2 antigen during and after artemether therapy, acknowledging that the HRP2 signal was of no value during the first week of treatment but appeared to be a precise indicator of treatment failure under field conditions, when it was detected on day 14 posttreatment (10). However, we detected persistent HRP2 antigenemia in 80 (34.9%) of the cases on day 14 posttreatment.
Compared to the ICT Malaria Pf/Pv test, the OptiMAL-IT assay detected significantly fewer cases with persistent antigenemia on days 3, 7, and 14. On day 3 after antimalarial therapy, antigenemia dropped significantly from 93.8% (pLDH) and 24.6% (PMA) to 38.4% (pLDH) and 14.8% (PMA) (P < 0.02). The antigenemia level dropped further to 15.7% (pLDH) and 5.2% (PMA) on day 7. The OptiMAL-IT assay does not detect "antigen" per se but detects intact and functional parasite-specific LDH (pLDH) (14, 16, 19). Thus, the level of pLDH declines in parallel with the clearance of asexual parasitemia, and it has been suggested that this lack of antigen persistence after treatment may make this test useful in predicting treatment failure.
The persistent HRP2 antigenemia has also been suggested to be associated with gametocytemia (16, 17). We detected persistent antigenemia in 15 of the 27 (55.6%, HRP2) cases and in 19 (70.1%, PMA) patients with gametocytemia on day 3 after antimalarial therapy. The antigenemia in most of these cases persisted by day 14. It is not clear to what extent HRP2 antigen is found in gametocytes. Recently, the HRP2 mRNA transcript and protein have both been demonstrated in late-stage gametocytes (17). A study conducted in India found a high frequency of persistent HRP2 antigen after treatment with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (42% on day 7), with half of these FP HRP2 results being gametocytogenic (13). Tjitra et al. found a strong association of persistent HRP2 antigenemia and PMA reactivity with gametocytemia (16). They concluded that gametocytes were the dominant cause of persistent PMA reactivity after treatment for malaria and that persistent PMA reactivity in convalescence did not appear to occur in patients who did not develop gametocytes after treatment. However, in the present study only 23 of the 160 (14%) patients with gametocytemia showed persistent antigenemia. No association with persistent HRP2 and/or PMA antigenemia and gametocytemia was observed in an Australian study since none of their patients had gametocytemia (3). In the present study, the proportionate reactivity for both antigens showed that the drop in pLDH+ PMA reactivity was significantly higher than that for pLDH PMA+ reactivity on day 3 (64% versus 38%, respectively [P < 0.03]).
In conclusion, the new generations of nonmicroscopic immunochromatographic assay offer a practical chance to move the diagnosis of malaria away from the laboratory and nearer to the patient. However, persistent HRP2 and PMA antigenemia beyond the clearance of peripheral parasitemia in certain cases reduces the usefulness of the ICT Malaria Pf/Pv test for monitoring the response to therapy. The levels of pLDH and PMA were shown to decline in parallel with the clearance of asexual parasitemia, and thus it was suggested that the disappearance of the parasite-specific enzyme pLDH after treatment may make the OptiMAL-IT assay useful in predicting treatment failure. Although improvements in quantification of current antigens may improve predictive ability of treatment failure, the use of alternative antigens with more rapid clearance and greater sensitivity and specificity for viable parasites is essential for reaching a higher level of clinical utility.
We thank all technical staff and patients who participated in this study.
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