Are We Now Well Prepared for Another Major Visceral Leishmaniasis Epidemic in Sudan?

Abstract To minimize the chance for future visceral leishmaniasis (VL) epidemics such as the 1988–1991 epidemic in Sudan, several VL detection tools have been introduced. There are many VL diagnostics with excellent sensitivities, specificities, and ease of use reported. However, additional test cha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Open forum infectious diseases 2019-10, Vol.6 (10), p.ofz226-ofz226
Hauptverfasser: el Harith, Abdallah, Mahamoud, Abdelhafeiz, Awad, Yousif, Mansour, Durria, Abass, Elfadil Mustafa, el Agib, Atif, Riscala Madi, Rubens, Semiao-Santos, Saul J, Osman, Hussam Ali
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract To minimize the chance for future visceral leishmaniasis (VL) epidemics such as the 1988–1991 epidemic in Sudan, several VL detection tools have been introduced. There are many VL diagnostics with excellent sensitivities, specificities, and ease of use reported. However, additional test characteristics should be considered for use in the detection of future VL epidemics. The potential for local production or uninterrupted availability, low production and application costs, and stability at ≥45°C are of the utmost importance. Of the antibody-, antigen-, or DNA-based methods introduced, only a liquid direct agglutination test (LQ-DAT) remains in routine use. The LQ-DAT test may be the ideal diagnostic for detection of VL epidemics due to its low cost ($0.50/patient), stability under frequent and long-duration electric failures, and high level of reproducibility. The improved reliability for VL detection achieved locally through incorporating autochthonous L. donovani strains in antigen processing and precluding toxicants in test execution provides optimal sensitivity and safety for routine and mass application.
ISSN:2328-8957
2328-8957
DOI:10.1093/ofid/ofz226