Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Oct 2022)

An Innovative Test for the Rapid Detection of Specific IgG Antibodies in Human Whole-Blood for the Diagnosis of <i>Opisthorchis viverrini</i> Infection

  • Lakkhana Sadaow,
  • Rutchanee Rodpai,
  • Penchom Janwan,
  • Patcharaporn Boonroumkaew,
  • Oranuch Sanpool,
  • Tongjit Thanchomnang,
  • Hiroshi Yamasaki,
  • Wannaporn Ittiprasert,
  • Victoria H. Mann,
  • Paul J. Brindley,
  • Wanchai Maleewong,
  • Pewpan M. Intapan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7100308
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10
p. 308

Abstract

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Chronic human liver fluke infections caused by Opisthorchis viverrini and Clonorchis sinensis can last for decades and cause liver and biliary diseases, including life-threatening pathology prior to cholangiocarcinoma (CCA). CCA generally has a poor prognosis. Serological diagnosis can support parasitological examination in diagnosing disease and screening for the risk of CCA. Here, we present an improved and innovative lateral flow immunochromatographic test (ICT) kit that uses whole-blood samples (WBS) rather than serum to diagnose human opisthorchiasis, which also successfully diagnosed human clonorchiasis. This ICT includes a soluble worm extract of O. viverrini adults and colloidal-gold-labeled conjugates of the IgG antibody to evaluate the diagnostic values with simulated WBS (n = 347). Simulated WBS were obtained by the spiking infection sera with red blood cells. The diagnostic sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, and accuracy for detecting opisthorchiasis were 95.5%, 87.0%, 80.5%, 97.2%, and 90.1%, respectively. For clonorchiasis, these findings were 85.7%, 87.0%, 53.6%, 97.2%, and 86.8%, respectively. Combined for both diseases, they were 93.2%, 87.0%, 84.0%, 94.6%, and 89.6%, respectively. The ICT kit can possibly replace the ICT platforms for antibody detection in serum samples in field surveys in remote areas where sophisticated equipment is not available.

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