Scientific Reports (Jun 2021)

Considerations for quality assurance of multiplex malaria antigen detection assays with large sample sets

  • Rachel Alvarado,
  • Lotus L. van den Hoogen,
  • Nnaemeka C. Iriemenam,
  • Oluwaseun O. Akinmulero,
  • Andrew N. Thomas,
  • Israel Tamunonengiyeofori,
  • Evbuomwan Erasogie,
  • Achugbu C. Chimaoge,
  • Ayuba B. Dawurung,
  • Mudiaga K. Esiekpe,
  • Mary U. Okoli,
  • Nwando Mba,
  • Abiodun Ogunniyi,
  • Alash’le Abimiku,
  • Mark Maire,
  • Orji O. Bassey,
  • McPaul Okoye,
  • Mahesh Swaminathan,
  • Stacie M. Greby,
  • Nnaemeka Ndodo,
  • Chikwe Ihekweazu,
  • Ado Abubakar,
  • Laura Steinhardt,
  • Eric Rogier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-92723-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Multiplex assays for malaria antigen detection can gather data from large sample sets, but considerations for the consistency and quality assurance (QA) of mass testing lack evaluation. We present a QA framework for a study occurring November 2019 to March 2020 involving 504 assay plates detecting four Plasmodium antigens: pan-Plasmodium aldolase and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), histidine-rich protein 2 (HRP2), P. vivax LDH (PvLDH). Controls on each plate included buffer blank, antigen negative blood, and 4-point positive dilution curve. The blank and negative blood provided consistently low signal for all targets except for pAldolase, which showed variability. Positive curve signals decreased throughout the 5-month study duration but retained a coefficient of variation (CV) of < 5%, with the exception of HRP2 in month 5 (CV of 11%). Regression fittings for inter-plate control signals provided mean and standard deviations (SDs), and of 504 assay plates, 6 (1.2%) violated the acceptable deviation limits and were repeated. For the 40,272 human blood samples assayed in this study, of 161,088 potential data points (each sample × 4 antigens), 160,641 (99.7%) successfully passed quality checks. The QA framework presented here can be utilized to ensure quality of laboratory antigen detection for large sample sets.