PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Sensitivity and specificity of rapid hepatitis C antibody assays in freshly collected whole blood, plasma and serum samples: A multicentre prospective study.

  • Beatrice N Vetter,
  • Stefano Ongarello,
  • Alexander Tyshkovskiy,
  • Maia Alkhazashvili,
  • Nazibrola Chitadze,
  • Kimcheng Choun,
  • An Sokkab,
  • Anja De Weggheleire,
  • Fien Vanroye,
  • Elena Ivanova Reipold

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0243040
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. e0243040

Abstract

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BackgroundThis study evaluated performance of two hepatitis C virus (HCV) rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) performed by intended users in resource-limited settings.MethodsTesting was conducted at three facilities in two countries (Georgia, Cambodia) using matched fingerstick whole blood, plasma and serum samples. Investigational RDTs were compared with a composite reference standard (CRS) comprised of three laboratory tests, and a reference RDT.ResultsIn matched samples from 489 HCV positive and 967 HCV negative participants, specificity with both investigational RDTs was high using either reference method (≥98.4% in all sample types). Sensitivity was lower in whole blood versus plasma and serum for both RDTs compared with the CRS (86.5-91.4% vs 97.5-98.0% and 97.3-97.1%) and reference RDT (93.6-97.8% vs 100% and 99.4%). Sensitivity improved when considering only samples with detectable HCV viral load.ConclusionSensitivity was highest in serum and plasma versus whole blood. The World Health Organization prequalification criterion (≥98%) was narrowly missed by both RDTs in serum, and one in plasma, possibly due to the intended user factor. Performance in whole blood was considered adequate, given potential roles of HCV infection history, improved sensitivity with detectable viral load and performance similarities to the reference RDT.