1. Collaborative Studies for the Detection of Taenia spp. Infections in Humans within CYSTINET, the European Network on Taeniosis/Cysticercosis
- Author
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Gómez-Morales, María Ángeles, Pezzotti, Patrizio, Ludovisi, Alessandra, Boufana, Belgees, Dorny, Pierre, Kortbeek, Titia, Blocher, Joachim, Schmidt, Veronika, Amati, Marco, Gabriël, Sarah, Pozio, Edoardo, Winkler, Andrea Sylvia, The Ring Trial Participants, Flores, María, Perteguer-Prieto, Maria Jesus, Institute of Health and Society (Noruega), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Estado Unidos), and University of Oslo (Noruega)
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,diagnosis ,QH301-705.5 ,030231 tropical medicine ,030106 microbiology ,Neurocysticercosis ,Taenia spp ,Microbiology ,Article ,Serology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,Diagnosis ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,SOLIUM ANTIBODIES ,Medicine ,Taeniosis ,Biology (General) ,Collaborative study ,IMMUNOELECTROTRANSFER BLOT ASSAY ,CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID SAMPLES ,SAGINATA ,collaborative study ,RESTRICTION FRAGMENT ,biology ,business.industry ,Cysticercosis ,cysticercosis ,Network on ,Ring trial ,Biology and Life Sciences ,neurocysticercosis ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,PCR ,LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS ,taeniosis ,ring trial ,Taenia ,DIFFERENTIAL-DIAGNOSIS ,business - Abstract
Laboratory tools for diagnosing taeniosis/cysticercosis in non-endemic countries are available, however, there is little data on their performance. To provide information on the sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility of these tools, inter-laboratory studies were organized within the EU COST-Action CYSTINET (TD1302). Two serological and one coprological Ring Trials (RTs) were organized to test a panel of human-derived sera and stool samples using assays routinely conducted by the participating laboratories to detect Taenia spp. infections. Four Western blots (WBs) and five ELISAs were used by nine laboratories for cysticercosis diagnosis. In the first serological RT, the overall sensitivity was 67.6% (95% CI, 59.1–75.4), whereas specificity was 97% (95% CI, 89.8–99.6). WBs recorded the best accuracy. A second serological RT was organized, to assess the three tests most frequently used during the first RT. Two out of six laboratories performed all the three tests. The overall sensitivity and specificity were 52.8% (95% CI, 42.8–62.7) and 98.1% (95% CI, 93.2–99.7), respectively. Laboratory performance strongly affected test results. Twelve laboratories participated in the coprological RT using conventional microscopy and six laboratories used molecular assays. Traditional diagnosis by microscopy yielded better results than molecular diagnosis. This may have been influenced by the lack of standardization of molecular tests across participating laboratories.
- Published
- 2021