Uncertain outcomes: adjusting for misclassification in antimalarial efficacy studies

Evaluation of antimalarial efficacy is difficult because recurrent parasitaemia can be due to recrudescence or re-infection. PCR is used to differentiate between recrudescences and re-infections by comparing parasite allelic variants before and after treatment. However, PCR-corrected results are sus...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epidemiology and infection 2011-04, Vol.139 (4), p.544-551
Hauptverfasser: PORTER, K. A., BURCH, C. L., POOLE, C., JULIANO, J. J., COLE, S. R., MESHNICK, S. R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Evaluation of antimalarial efficacy is difficult because recurrent parasitaemia can be due to recrudescence or re-infection. PCR is used to differentiate between recrudescences and re-infections by comparing parasite allelic variants before and after treatment. However, PCR-corrected results are susceptible to misclassification: false positives, due to re-infection by the same variant present in the patient before treatment; and false negatives, due to variants that are present but too infrequent to be detected in the pre-treatment PCR, but are then detectable post-treatment. This paper aimed to explore factors affecting the probability of false positives and proposes a Monte Carlo uncertainty analysis to account for both types of misclassification. Higher levels of transmission intensity, increased multiplicity of infection, and limited allelic variation resulted in more false recrudescences. The uncertainty analysis exploits characteristics of study data to minimize bias in the estimate of efficacy and can be applied to areas of different transmission intensity.
ISSN:0950-2688
1469-4409
DOI:10.1017/S0950268810001652