logo
Science Portal
Copyright © Médecins Sans Frontières
v2.1.5153.produseast1
About MSF Science Portal
About
Contact Us
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Copyright © Médecins Sans Frontières
v2.1.5153.produseast1
Evaluation of qPCR on blood and skin microbiopsies, peripheral blood buffy coat smear, and urine antigen ELISA for diagnosis and test of cure for visceral leishmaniasis in HIV-coinfected patients in India: a prospective cohort study | Protocol / Research Protocol | MSF Science Portal
Protocol
|Research Protocol

Evaluation of qPCR on blood and skin microbiopsies, peripheral blood buffy coat smear, and urine antigen ELISA for diagnosis and test of cure for visceral leishmaniasis in HIV-coinfected patients in India: a prospective cohort study

Owen SI, Burza S, Verma N, Mahajan R, Harshana A, Pandey K, Cloots K, Adams ER, Das P
Download

Similar Content
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Abstract
INTRODUCTION
HIV coinfection presents a challenge for diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis (VL). Invasive splenic or bone marrow aspiration with microscopic visualisation of Leishmania parasites remains the gold standard for diagnosis of VL in HIV-coinfected patients. Furthermore, a test of cure by splenic or bone marrow aspiration is required as patients with VL-HIV infection are at a high risk of treatment failure. However, there remain financial, implementation and safety costs to these invasive techniques which severely limit their use under field conditions.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS
We aim to evaluate blood and skin qPCR, peripheral blood buffy coat smear microscopy and urine antigen ELISA as non-invasive or minimally invasive alternatives for diagnosis and post-treatment test of cure for VL in HIV-coinfected patients in India, using a sample of 91 patients with parasitologically confirmed symptomatic VL-HIV infection.

Countries

India

Subject Area

diagnosticsneglected tropical diseaseskala azarHIV/AIDS

Languages

English
DOI
10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042519
Published Date
30 Apr 2021
PubMed ID
33931406
Journal
BMJ Open
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages e042519
Dimensions Badge