PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jul 2020)

Identifying thresholds for classifying moderate-to-heavy soil-transmitted helminth intensity infections for FECPAKG2, McMaster, Mini-FLOTAC and qPCR.

  • Bruno Levecke,
  • Piet Cools,
  • Marco Albonico,
  • Shaali Ame,
  • Cécile Angebault,
  • Mio Ayana,
  • Jerzy M Behnke,
  • Jeffrey M Bethony,
  • Giuseppe Cringoli,
  • Daniel Dana,
  • Bertrand Guillard,
  • Nguyen Thi Viet Hoa,
  • Gagandeep Kang,
  • Deepthi Kattula,
  • Jennifer Keiser,
  • Andrew C Kotze,
  • Leonardo F Matoso,
  • Maria P Maurelli,
  • James S McCarthy,
  • Zeleke Mekonnen,
  • Greg Mirams,
  • Antonio Montresor,
  • Rodrigo Corrêa Oliveira,
  • Maria V Periago,
  • Simone A Pinto,
  • Laura Rinaldi,
  • Somphou Sayasone,
  • Laurentine Sumo,
  • Louis-Albert Tchuem-Tchuenté,
  • Dang Thi Cam Thach,
  • Eurion Thomas,
  • Ahmed Zeynudin,
  • Jaco J Verweij,
  • Johnny Vlaminck,
  • Jozef Vercruysse

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008296
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. e0008296

Abstract

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The World Health Organization (WHO) has defined moderate-to-heavy intensity (M&HI) infections with soil-transmitted helminths (Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura and the two hookworms, Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus) based on specific values of eggs per gram of stool, as measured by the Kato-Katz method. There are a variety of novel microscopy and DNA-based methods but it remains unclear whether applying current WHO thresholds on to these methods allows for a reliable classification of M&HI infections. We evaluated both WHO and method-specific thresholds for classifying the M&HI infections for novel microscopic (FECPAKG2, McMaster and Mini-FLOTAC) and DNA-based (qPCR) diagnostic methods. For this, we determined method-specific thresholds that best classified M&HI infections (defined by Kato-Katz and WHO thresholds; reference method) in two multi-country drug efficacy studies. Subsequently, we verified whether applying these method-specific thresholds improved the agreement in classifying M&HI infections compared to the reference method. When we applied the WHO thresholds, the new microscopic methods mainly misclassified M&HI as low intensity, and to a lesser extent low intensity infection as M&HI. For FECPAKG2, applying the method-specific thresholds significantly improved the agreement for Ascaris (moderate → substantial), Trichuris and hookworms (fair → moderate). For Mini-FLOTAC, a significantly improved agreement was observed for hookworms only (fair → moderate). For the other STHs, the agreement was almost perfect and remained unchanged. For McMaster, the method-specific thresholds revealed a fair to a substantial agreement but did not significantly improve the agreement. For qPCR, the method-specific thresholds based on genome equivalents per ml of DNA moderately agreed with the reference method for hookworm and Trichuris infections. For Ascaris, there was a substantial agreement. We defined method-specific thresholds that improved the classification of M&HI infections. Validation studies are required before they can be recommended for general use in assessing M&HI infections in programmatic settings.