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Comparison of the Automated OvaCyte Telenostic Faecal Analyser versus the McMaster and Mini-FLOTAC Techniques in the Estimation of Helminth Faecal Egg Counts in Equine.

Authors :
Elghryani, Nagwa
McAloon, Conor
Mincher, Craig
McOwan, Trish
Waal, Theo de
Source :
Animals (2076-2615). Dec2023, Vol. 13 Issue 24, p3874. 11p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Simple Summary: The faecal examination test is commonly employed for the identification and counting of parasite eggs in faecal samples. In this study, the OvaCyte Telenostic analyser (OCT) was used for detecting and counting helminth parasites in equine and compared with the McMaster and Mini-FLOTAC techniques. The prevalence of strongyle-type eggs was the highest of the detected helminth parasites. There was a strong correlation and agreement between the OCT and the other two counting techniques in this study. In terms of measuring the sensitivity and specificity, the OCT had the highest sensitivity for the detection of strongyles, Parascaris spp., and Anoplocephala spp., compared to the other two techniques. Gastrointestinal helminth parasites continue to be a significant threat to the health of equine. OvaCyte Telenostic (OCT) (Telenostic Ltd., Kilkenny, Ireland) has developed an automated digital microscope utilising Artificial Intelligence to identify and count the clinically important helminth species in equine, bovine, and ovine host species. In this paper, the performance of the OCT analyser was evaluated for the detection and counting of equine helminth species parasites and its performance compared to the currently accepted benchmark methods of faecal egg counts being the McMaster and the Mini-FLOTAC techniques. A pairwise comparison of tests was assessed based on the correlation of egg counts and Cohen's kappa agreement statistics for dichotomized outcomes. Bayesian latent class analysis was used to estimate the sensitivity and specificity of all three techniques in the absence of a gold standard for four helminth parasites (strongyles, Anoplocephala spp., Parascaris spp. and Strongyloides westeri). Based on the analysis of 783 equine faecal samples, we found a high level (ρ ≥ 0.94) of correlation between each pairwise comparison of techniques for strongyle egg counts. Cohen's kappa agreement between techniques was high for strongyles and S. westeri, moderate for Parascaris spp., and low for Anoplocephala spp. All three techniques had a high sensitivity and specificity (>0.90) for strongyles. Across helminth parasites, the sensitivity of the OCT was the highest of the three techniques evaluated for strongyles (0.98 v 0.96 and 0.94), Anoplocephala spp. (0.86 v 0.44 and 0.46) and Parascaris spp. (0.96 v 0.83 and 0.96); but lowest for S. westeri (0.74 v 0.88 and 0.88), compared to McMaster and Mini-FLOTAC, respectively. In terms of specificity, OCT was the lowest in two species (Parascaris spp. 0.96, Anoplocephala spp. 0.95). In conclusion, OCT has a sensitivity and specificity statistically similar to both McMaster and Mini-FLOTAC, and had a higher correlation with Mini-FLOTAC. The OCT point of care faecal analyser offers improved workflow, test turn-around time and does not require trained laboratory personnel to operate or interpret the results [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20762615
Volume :
13
Issue :
24
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Animals (2076-2615)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174403755
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13243874