There is no better tool than a cheap quick test to determine disease
state and malaria certainly needs one. What this means is that we
can generally act sooner and certainly clear out low risk areas and
keep them clean.
I do not know if we are going to completely conquer malaria but I do
sense that it is now at least in steady global retreat ultimately
back into a few nasty Refugio were men rarely pass without real
protection. The momentum has been on our side for most of a century
but recent work is now allowing acceleration as well as the
increasing access to resources.
It remains a hard problem but it is becoming a well managed problem
on a real downtrend. The same holds for AIDS. The only thing that
we have to be wary of is our own impatience.
New Malaria Test
Kit Gives a Boost to Elimination Efforts Worldwide
May 17, 2013 — A
new, highly sensitive blood test that quickly detects even the lowest
levels of malaria parasites in the body could make a dramatic
difference in efforts to tackle the disease in the UK and across the
world, according to new research published in the Journal of
Infectious Diseases.
In two studies led by
researchers in the UK and Switzerland, the new LAMP (loop-mediated
isothermal amplification) test was compared to existing methods in
London laboratories that deal with imported cases of malaria to the
UK, and to diagnostic methods used in the field in Uganda, where
malaria is a leading cause of illness and death.
The simple test, which
can be performed by a non-specialist health worker and does not need
refrigerating like other tests, requires a sample of blood to be
processed and placed in a test tube with a reactive powder then
heated. If the malaria-causing Plasmodium parasites are present, the
tube glows green. The whole process takes less than an hour.
The first study, led
in London by the Hospital for Tropical Diseases (HTD), the Foundation
for Innovative New Diagnostics and the London School of Hygiene &
Tropical Medicine, compared LAMP to existing laboratory diagnostic
methods on 705 blood samples of suspected imported malaria cases in
the UK.
Dr Colin Sutherland,
Clinical Scientist at HTD and Reader in Parasitology at the Malaria
Reference Laboratory at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical
Medicine, said: "According to data collected for Public Health
England by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the
UK treats at least 1,500 cases of imported malaria every year.
Despite the very best efforts of the NHS, a handful of malaria
related deaths still occur annually in UK hospitals. The new LAMP
test for malaria performed very well when tested in the parasite
reference laboratory at HTD, and correctly identified every malaria
patient out of 705 malaria tests performed.
"An important
advantage of LAMP is that non-specialist staff in any hospital in the
UK will be able to accurately and rapidly detect the presence of
malaria parasites, and immediately begin treatment without waiting
for confirmation from local experts or specialist laboratories. This
speed of diagnosis can make the difference between an uncomplicated
episode of malaria that rapidly responds to treatment, and
progression to severe disease, organ failure and heightened risk of
death. It could also save the NHS a significant amount of money from
having to treat the complications of malaria."
LAMP was faster than
PCR (polymerase chain reaction) tests, which require specialised
laboratory equipment, costly reagents and advanced training. It was
also more accurate than microscopic examination of blood slides,
which require a trained specialist to identify the malaria parasites.
In the second study,
researchers from HTD, the Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics,
Switzerland, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and
the Uganda Ministry of Health, Kampala, looked at the accuracy of the
test at a rural clinic in Uganda.
Blood samples from 272
patients with suspected malaria were tested using LA MP using a
simple generator to provide electrical current. These results were
compared with expert microscopy and PCR performed at central
reference laboratories. LAMP detected cases of low-level malaria
parasite infection that were missed by expert microscopy, and
achieved accuracy similar to that of PCR down to very low levels. The
researchers say these findings have important implications for
eliminating malaria, which causes an estimated 660,000 deaths
worldwide every year.
Dr Sutherland, who
worked on both of the studies, said: "Patterns of malaria
disease in Africa and elsewhere across the tropics are becoming much
less predictable, and control of malaria needs an appropriate test to
identify infected individuals in the populations at risk. These
people may not display any malaria symptoms. We have begun using LAMP
as a new tool for identifying "hot spots" of malaria
infections which can be mopped up quickly through a combination of
drug treatment, house spraying and distribution of bed-nets.
"LAMP will
potentially contribute to saving many families and communities from
the blight of a disease that keeps children from succeeding at
school, prevents adults from growing food or working, holds back
regional economies and exacts an annual death toll in the hundreds of
thousands."
The LAMP malaria test
will now be used in the Malaria Reference Laboratory at the London
School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine to help identify imported
cases of malaria in the UK as well as being used by health workers in
the field in malaria endemic countries.
The LAMP malaria test
is commercially available and was developed by the Foundation for
Innovative New Diagnostics, the Hospital for Tropical Diseases,
London and Eiken Chemical Company Ltd, Japan. The studies were funded
by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of the Government of The Netherlands, and the UK Department
for International Development.
1 comment:
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