Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community : Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection

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Standard

Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community  : Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection. / Kildemoes, Anna O.; Vennervald, Birgitte J.; Tukahebwa, Edridah M.; Kabatereine, Narcis B.; Magnussen, Pascal; De Dood, Claudia J.; Deelder, André M.; Wilson, Shona; Van Dam, Govert J.

I: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases , Bind 11, Nr. 11, e0006054, 13.11.2017.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kildemoes, AO, Vennervald, BJ, Tukahebwa, EM, Kabatereine, NB, Magnussen, P, De Dood, CJ, Deelder, AM, Wilson, S & Van Dam, GJ 2017, 'Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community : Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection', PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases , bind 11, nr. 11, e0006054. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006054

APA

Kildemoes, A. O., Vennervald, B. J., Tukahebwa, E. M., Kabatereine, N. B., Magnussen, P., De Dood, C. J., Deelder, A. M., Wilson, S., & Van Dam, G. J. (2017). Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community : Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases , 11(11), [e0006054]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006054

Vancouver

Kildemoes AO, Vennervald BJ, Tukahebwa EM, Kabatereine NB, Magnussen P, De Dood CJ o.a. Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community : Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases . 2017 nov. 13;11(11). e0006054. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006054

Author

Kildemoes, Anna O. ; Vennervald, Birgitte J. ; Tukahebwa, Edridah M. ; Kabatereine, Narcis B. ; Magnussen, Pascal ; De Dood, Claudia J. ; Deelder, André M. ; Wilson, Shona ; Van Dam, Govert J. / Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community  : Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection. I: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases . 2017 ; Bind 11, Nr. 11.

Bibtex

@article{5acfa7d677b04697a31c189e2c392ad5,
title = "Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community : Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection",
abstract = "Schistosomiasis control and elimination has priority in public health agendas in several sub-Saharan countries. However, achieving these goals remains a substantial challenge. In order to assess progress of interventions and treatment efficacy it is pertinent to have accurate, feasible and affordable diagnostic tools. Detection of Schistosoma mansoni infection by circulating cathodic antigen (CCA) in urine is an attractive option as this measure describes live worm infection noninvasively. In order to interpret treatment efficacy and re-infection levels, knowledge about clearance of this antigen is necessary. The current study aims to investigate, whether antigen clearance as a proxy for decreasing worm numbers is reflected in decreasing CCA levels in urine shortly after praziquantel treatment. Here CCA levels are measured 24 hours post treatment in response to both a single and two treatments. The study was designed as a series of cross-sectional urine and stool sample collections from 446 individuals nested in a two-arm randomised single blinded longitudinal clinical trial cohort matched by gender and age (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00215267) receiving one or two praziquantel treatments. CCA levels in urine were determined by carbon-conjugated monoclonal antibody lateral flow strip assay and eggs per gram faeces for S. mansoni and soil-transmitted helminths by Kato-Katz. Significant correlations between CCA levels and S. mansoni egg count at every measured time point were found and confirmed the added beneficial effect of a second treatment at two weeks after baseline. Furthermore, presence of hookworm was found not to be a confounder for CCA test specificity. Twenty-four hours post treatment measures of mean CCA scores showed significant reductions. In conclusion, removal of CCA in response to treatment is detectable as a decline in CCA in urine already after 24 hours. This has relevance for use and interpretation of laboratory based and point-of-care CCA tests in terms of treatment efficacy and re-infection proportions as this measure provides information on the presence of all actively feeding stages of S. mansoni, which conventional faecal microscopy methods do not accurately reflect.",
author = "Kildemoes, {Anna O.} and Vennervald, {Birgitte J.} and Tukahebwa, {Edridah M.} and Kabatereine, {Narcis B.} and Pascal Magnussen and {De Dood}, {Claudia J.} and Deelder, {Andr{\'e} M.} and Shona Wilson and {Van Dam}, {Govert J.}",
year = "2017",
month = nov,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pntd.0006054",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "P L o S Neglected Tropical Diseases (Online)",
issn = "1935-2735",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Rapid clearance of Schistosoma mansoni circulating cathodic antigen after treatment shown by urine strip tests in a Ugandan fishing community 

T2 - Relevance for monitoring treatment efficacy and re-infection

AU - Kildemoes, Anna O.

AU - Vennervald, Birgitte J.

AU - Tukahebwa, Edridah M.

AU - Kabatereine, Narcis B.

AU - Magnussen, Pascal

AU - De Dood, Claudia J.

AU - Deelder, André M.

AU - Wilson, Shona

AU - Van Dam, Govert J.

PY - 2017/11/13

Y1 - 2017/11/13

N2 - Schistosomiasis control and elimination has priority in public health agendas in several sub-Saharan countries. However, achieving these goals remains a substantial challenge. In order to assess progress of interventions and treatment efficacy it is pertinent to have accurate, feasible and affordable diagnostic tools. Detection of Schistosoma mansoni infection by circulating cathodic antigen (CCA) in urine is an attractive option as this measure describes live worm infection noninvasively. In order to interpret treatment efficacy and re-infection levels, knowledge about clearance of this antigen is necessary. The current study aims to investigate, whether antigen clearance as a proxy for decreasing worm numbers is reflected in decreasing CCA levels in urine shortly after praziquantel treatment. Here CCA levels are measured 24 hours post treatment in response to both a single and two treatments. The study was designed as a series of cross-sectional urine and stool sample collections from 446 individuals nested in a two-arm randomised single blinded longitudinal clinical trial cohort matched by gender and age (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00215267) receiving one or two praziquantel treatments. CCA levels in urine were determined by carbon-conjugated monoclonal antibody lateral flow strip assay and eggs per gram faeces for S. mansoni and soil-transmitted helminths by Kato-Katz. Significant correlations between CCA levels and S. mansoni egg count at every measured time point were found and confirmed the added beneficial effect of a second treatment at two weeks after baseline. Furthermore, presence of hookworm was found not to be a confounder for CCA test specificity. Twenty-four hours post treatment measures of mean CCA scores showed significant reductions. In conclusion, removal of CCA in response to treatment is detectable as a decline in CCA in urine already after 24 hours. This has relevance for use and interpretation of laboratory based and point-of-care CCA tests in terms of treatment efficacy and re-infection proportions as this measure provides information on the presence of all actively feeding stages of S. mansoni, which conventional faecal microscopy methods do not accurately reflect.

AB - Schistosomiasis control and elimination has priority in public health agendas in several sub-Saharan countries. However, achieving these goals remains a substantial challenge. In order to assess progress of interventions and treatment efficacy it is pertinent to have accurate, feasible and affordable diagnostic tools. Detection of Schistosoma mansoni infection by circulating cathodic antigen (CCA) in urine is an attractive option as this measure describes live worm infection noninvasively. In order to interpret treatment efficacy and re-infection levels, knowledge about clearance of this antigen is necessary. The current study aims to investigate, whether antigen clearance as a proxy for decreasing worm numbers is reflected in decreasing CCA levels in urine shortly after praziquantel treatment. Here CCA levels are measured 24 hours post treatment in response to both a single and two treatments. The study was designed as a series of cross-sectional urine and stool sample collections from 446 individuals nested in a two-arm randomised single blinded longitudinal clinical trial cohort matched by gender and age (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00215267) receiving one or two praziquantel treatments. CCA levels in urine were determined by carbon-conjugated monoclonal antibody lateral flow strip assay and eggs per gram faeces for S. mansoni and soil-transmitted helminths by Kato-Katz. Significant correlations between CCA levels and S. mansoni egg count at every measured time point were found and confirmed the added beneficial effect of a second treatment at two weeks after baseline. Furthermore, presence of hookworm was found not to be a confounder for CCA test specificity. Twenty-four hours post treatment measures of mean CCA scores showed significant reductions. In conclusion, removal of CCA in response to treatment is detectable as a decline in CCA in urine already after 24 hours. This has relevance for use and interpretation of laboratory based and point-of-care CCA tests in terms of treatment efficacy and re-infection proportions as this measure provides information on the presence of all actively feeding stages of S. mansoni, which conventional faecal microscopy methods do not accurately reflect.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006054

DO - 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006054

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29131820

VL - 11

JO - P L o S Neglected Tropical Diseases (Online)

JF - P L o S Neglected Tropical Diseases (Online)

SN - 1935-2735

IS - 11

M1 - e0006054

ER -

ID: 185632648