Malaria Journal (Feb 2011)

Blood transfer devices for malaria rapid diagnostic tests: evaluation of accuracy, safety and ease of use

  • Albertini Audrey,
  • Asiimwe Caroline,
  • Mationg Mary,
  • Luchavez Jennifer,
  • Oyibo Wellington,
  • Hopkins Heidi,
  • González Iveth J,
  • Gatton Michelle L,
  • Bell David

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-10-30
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. 30

Abstract

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Abstract Background Malaria rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) are increasingly used by remote health personnel with minimal training in laboratory techniques. RDTs must, therefore, be as simple, safe and reliable as possible. Transfer of blood from the patient to the RDT is critical to safety and accuracy, and poses a significant challenge to many users. Blood transfer devices were evaluated for accuracy and precision of volume transferred, safety and ease of use, to identify the most appropriate devices for use with RDTs in routine clinical care. Methods Five devices, a loop, straw-pipette, calibrated pipette, glass capillary tube, and a new inverted cup device, were evaluated in Nigeria, the Philippines and Uganda. The 227 participating health workers used each device to transfer blood from a simulated finger-prick site to filter paper. For each transfer, the number of attempts required to collect and deposit blood and any spilling of blood during transfer were recorded. Perceptions of ease of use and safety of each device were recorded for each participant. Blood volume transferred was calculated from the area of blood spots deposited on filter paper. Results The overall mean volumes transferred by devices differed significantly from the target volume of 5 microliters (p Conclusions The performance of blood transfer devices varied in this evaluation of accuracy, blood safety, ease of use, and user preference. The inverted cup design achieved the highest overall performance, while the loop also performed well. These findings have relevance for any point-of-care diagnostics that require blood sampling.