Author:
van den Hoogen Lotus L.,Présumé Jacquelin,Romilus Ithamare,Mondélus Gina,Elismé Tamara,Sepúlveda Nuno,Stresman Gillian,Druetz Thomas,Ashton Ruth A.,Joseph Vena,Eisele Thomas P.,Hamre Karen E. S.,Chang Michelle A.,Lemoine Jean F.,Tetteh Kevin K. A.,Boncy Jacques,Existe Alexandre,Drakeley Chris,Rogier Eric
Abstract
AbstractMeasuring antimalarial antibodies can estimate transmission in a population. To compare outputs, standardized laboratory testing is required. Here we describe the in-country establishment and quality control (QC) of a multiplex bead assay (MBA) for three sero-surveys in Haiti. Total IgG data against 21 antigens were collected for 32,758 participants. Titration curves of hyperimmune sera were included on assay plates, assay signals underwent 5-parameter regression, and inspection of the median and interquartile range (IQR) for the y-inflection point was used to determine assay precision. The medians and IQRs were similar for Surveys 1 and 2 for most antigens, while the IQRs increased for some antigens in Survey 3. Levey-Jennings charts for selected antigens provided a pass/fail criterion for each assay plate and, of 387 assay plates, 13 (3.4%) were repeated. Individual samples failed if IgG binding to the generic glutathione-S-transferase protein was observed, with 659 (2.0%) samples failing. An additional 455 (1.4%) observations failed due to low bead numbers (<20/analyte). The final dataset included 609,438 anti-malaria IgG data points from 32,099 participants; 96.6% of all potential data points if no QC failures had occurred. The MBA can be deployed with high-throughput data collection and low inter-plate variability while ensuring data quality.
Funder
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
25 articles.
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