Diagnosis of Plasmodium falciparum malaria at very low parasitaemias using a commercially available LAMP assay and RDT.
Payne RO., Edwards NJ., Themistocleous Y., Silk SE., Barrett JR., Rawlinson TA., Lim IW., Draper SJ., Minassian AM.
BackgroundMalaria is the most common tropical infection in the UK. Current guidelines suggest that testing on 3 consecutive days is required following an initial negative result. This study aimed to see whether newer diagnostics (loop-mediated amplification assay [LAMP]) had sufficient sensitivity to support a change in diagnostic practice.MethodsBlood samples from 11 participants who had undergone controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) with Plasmodium falciparum malaria were assessed from day 6 (C+6) for malaria positivity using the Carestart Malaria rapid diagnostic test (RDT) and from C+4 using the Alethia Malaria LAMP assay. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction had been performed twice daily during CHMI follow-up. A retrospective analysis of samples submitted to the Sheffield Teaching Hospitals for malaria testing over a 5-y period was conducted, evaluating the combination of the Carestart RDT alongside blood film analysis, as per UK guidelines.ResultsIn CHMI samples, LAMP was positive for all parasitaemias >1000 parasites/ml, whereas RDTs were less reliable (59% positive for parasitaemias >1000 parasites/ml). The combination of RDT and blood films for clinical samples diagnosed most infections, but only a minority of negative samples had subsequent tests.ConclusionsLAMP has higher sensitivity than current UK recommended methods, with a potential to review the requirement for additional days of testing in the majority of patients.