Center for Global Health and Diseases, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio, United States of America ; Schistosomiasis Consortium for Operational Research and Evaluation, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2013 Sep 12;7(9):e2431. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002431. eCollection 2013.
Urogenital schistosomiasis remains highly endemic in Africa. Current control is based on drug administration, targeted either to school-age children or to high-risk communities at-large. Urine dipsticks for detection of microhematuria offer an inexpensive means for estimating infection prevalence. However, their diagnostic performance has not been systematically evaluated after community treatment, or in areas with continuing low prevalence. The objective of the present study was to perform meta-analysis of dipstick accuracy for S. haematobium infection in endemic regions, with special attention to performance where infection intensity or prevalence was low.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: This review was registered at inception with PROSPERO (CRD42012002165). Included studies were identified by computerized search of online databases and hand search of bibliographies and existing study archives. Eligible studies included published or unpublished population surveys irrespective of date, location, or language that compared dipstick diagnosis of S. haematobium infection to standard egg-count parasitology. For 95 included surveys, variation in dipstick sensitivity and specificity were evaluated according to study size, age- and sex-specific participation, region, local prevalence, treatment status, and other factors potentially affecting test performance. Independent of prevalence, accuracy was greater in surveys of school-age children (vs. adults), whereas performance was less good in North Africa, as compared to other regions. By hierarchical ROC analysis, overall dipstick sensitivity and specificity for detection of egg-positive urine were estimated at 81% and 89%, respectively. Sensitivity was lower among treated populations (72%) and in population subgroups having lower intensity infection (65%). When the insensitivity of egg count testing was considered (and diagnosis inferred instead from combined hematuria and egg-count findings), overall dipstick sensitivity/specificity were 82%/97%, with significantly better sensitivity (92%) in high prevalence settings.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This analysis suggests that dipsticks will continue to serve as very useful adjuncts for monitoring community prevalence following implementation of population-based control of urogenital schistosomiasis.
尿路血吸虫病在非洲仍然高度流行。目前的控制方法是基于药物治疗,针对学龄儿童或整个高危社区。尿液试纸检测微量血尿提供了一种廉价的方法来估计感染的流行率。然而,在社区治疗后或在感染率持续较低的地区,其诊断性能尚未得到系统评估。本研究的目的是对流行地区的尿液试纸检测 S. haematobium 感染的准确性进行荟萃分析,特别关注感染强度或流行率较低的情况下的性能。
方法/主要发现:本综述在开始时已在 PROSPERO(CRD42012002165)中进行了注册。通过计算机搜索在线数据库和手工搜索参考文献和现有研究档案来确定纳入的研究。纳入的研究包括已发表或未发表的人群调查,无论日期、地点或语言如何,这些研究将尿液试纸诊断 S. haematobium 感染与标准的虫卵寄生虫学进行了比较。对于 95 项纳入的调查,根据研究规模、年龄和性别特异性参与、地区、当地流行率、治疗状态和其他可能影响测试性能的因素,评估了试纸检测的敏感性和特异性的变化。独立于流行率,在学龄儿童的调查中(与成人相比),准确性更高,而在北非的表现则较差。通过分层 ROC 分析,估计用于检测阳性尿液的总体试纸敏感性和特异性分别为 81%和 89%。在治疗人群中(72%)和感染强度较低的人群亚组中(65%),敏感性较低。当考虑到卵计数检测的不敏感性(并从血尿和卵计数结果推断诊断)时,总体试纸的敏感性/特异性分别为 82%/97%,在高流行率环境中,敏感性显著提高(92%)。
结论/意义:这项分析表明,在实施基于人群的尿路血吸虫病控制后,尿液试纸将继续作为监测社区流行率的非常有用的辅助手段。