Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine, Hamburg, Germany.
Institute for Microbiology, Charité Berlin University of Medicine, Berlin, Germany.
PLoS One. 2018 Aug 6;13(8):e0201693. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201693. eCollection 2018.
Malaria remains a leading cause of childhood mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. Identifying patients who are at risk for severe manifestations at presentation still remains challenging. This study examines whether a semi-quantitative test on C-Reactive Protein (CRP) could be useful for rapidly predicting the presence or absence of malarial parasitemia in febrile children.
Data were collected from children with fever or a history of fever at the Agogo Presbyterian Hospital in the Ashanti Region of Ghana. Haematological measurements, microscopic detection of plasmodium species and semi-quantitative CRP measurements with a membrane-based immunoassay for whole blood were performed. CRP was classified as positive when the measured level was ≥ 10 mg/l.
During 548 visits, thick blood film results could be obtained from 541 patients, 270 (49.3%) yielded parasitemia with Plasmodium spp. Whereas malaria parasites were detected in only a few patients (7.1%) with normal CRP levels (< 10mg/l), more than a half of patients with an increased CRP concentration (≥ 10 mg/l) were parasite positive (OR 14.5 [CI 4.4-47.6], p<0.001). Patients with increased CRP levels had more than an eight-fold likelihood for parasitemia after correction for other parameters (adjusted OR 8.7 [CI 2.5-30.5], p<0.001). Sensitivity, specificity as well as positive predictive and negative predictive values of CRP for malaria were 99.3% (CI 96.2%-100%), 9.2% (CI 6.4%-12.8%), 31.7% (CI 27.4%-36.1%) and 97.0% (CI 84.2%-99.9%), respectively.
The semi-quantitative method of measuring CRP is cheap, rapid and easy to perform but not useful in predicting parasitemia and malaria. However, due to its high negative predictive value, it could have a role in identifying those patients unlikely to be presenting with clinical malaria.
疟疾仍然是撒哈拉以南非洲儿童死亡的主要原因。在就诊时识别出有发生严重表现风险的患者仍然具有挑战性。本研究检查了 C 反应蛋白(CRP)的半定量检测是否可用于快速预测发热儿童中是否存在疟原虫血症。
数据来自加纳阿散蒂地区阿戈戈长老会医院发热或有发热史的儿童。进行了血液学测量、疟原虫种类的显微镜检测以及全血膜免疫测定的半定量 CRP 测量。当测量水平≥10mg/l 时,将 CRP 分类为阳性。
在 548 次就诊中,可从 541 名患者中获得厚血膜结果,270 名(49.3%)产生了疟原虫属寄生虫。然而,在 CRP 水平正常(<10mg/l)的少数患者中仅检测到疟原虫寄生虫,而具有升高的 CRP 浓度(≥10mg/l)的患者中有一半以上为寄生虫阳性(OR 14.5 [CI 4.4-47.6],p<0.001)。在对其他参数进行校正后,CRP 水平升高的患者发生寄生虫血症的可能性超过八倍(调整后的 OR 8.7 [CI 2.5-30.5],p<0.001)。CRP 对疟疾的敏感性、特异性以及阳性预测值和阴性预测值分别为 99.3%(CI 96.2%-100%)、9.2%(CI 6.4%-12.8%)、31.7%(CI 27.4%-36.1%)和 97.0%(CI 84.2%-99.9%)。
CRP 的半定量测量方法便宜、快速且易于操作,但不能用于预测寄生虫血症和疟疾。然而,由于其高阴性预测值,它可能在识别不太可能出现临床疟疾的患者方面发挥作用。