Influence of Consecutive‐Day Blood Sampling on Polymerase Chain Reaction–Adjusted Parasitological Cure Rates in an Antimalarial‐Drug Trial Conducted in Tanzania
Author(s) -
Andreas Mårtensson,
Billy Ngasala,
Johan Ursing,
María Isabel Veiga,
Lisa Wiklund,
Christopher Membi,
Scott Montgomery,
Zul Premji,
Anna Färnert,
Anders Björkman
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the journal of infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.69
H-Index - 252
eISSN - 1537-6613
pISSN - 0022-1899
DOI - 10.1086/510910
Subject(s) - genotyping , artemether/lumefantrine , tanzania , malaria , blood sampling , plasmodium falciparum , polymerase chain reaction , parasitemia , medicine , sampling (signal processing) , biology , immunology , genotype , artemisinin , genetics , environmental science , filter (signal processing) , environmental planning , gene , computer science , computer vision
We assessed the influence that consecutive-day blood sampling, compared with single-day blood sampling, had on polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-adjusted parasitological cure after stepwise genotyping of merozoite surface proteins 2 (msp2) and 1 (msp1) in 106 children in Tanzania who had uncomplicated falciparum malaria treated with either sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine or artemether-lumefantrine; 78 of these children developed recurrent parasitemia during the 42-day follow-up period. Initial msp2 genotyping identified 27 and 33 recrudescences by use of single- and consecutive-day sampling, respectively; in subsequent msp1 genotyping, 17 and 21 of these episodes, respectively, were still classified as recrudescences; these results indicate a similar sensitivity of the standard single-day PCR protocol--that is, 82% (27/33) and 81% (17/21), in both genotyping steps. Interpretation of PCR-adjusted results will significantly depend on methodology.
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