Affiliation:
1. Medical Microbiology, University Medical Centre Nijmegen, Nijmegen
2. KIT Biomedical Research, Royal Tropical Institute, Amsterdam
3. Research and Development, bioMérieux, Boxtel, The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Determination of the number of malaria parasites by routine or even expert microscopy is not always sufficiently sensitive for detailed quantitative studies on the population dynamics of
Plasmodium falciparum
, such as intervention or vaccine trials. To circumvent this problem, two more sensitive assays, real-time quantitative nucleic acid sequence-based amplification (QT-NASBA) and real-time quantitative PCR (QT-PCR) were compared for quantification of
P. falciparum
parasites. QT-NASBA was adapted to molecular beacon real-time detection technology, which enables a reduction of the time of analysis and of contamination risk while retaining the specificity and sensitivity of the original assay. Both QT-NASBA and QT-PCR have a sensitivity of 20 parasites/ml of blood, but QT-PCR requires a complicated DNA extraction procedure and the use of 500 μl of venous blood to achieve this sensitivity, compared to 50 μl of finger prick blood for real-time QT-NASBA. Both techniques show a significant correlation to microscopic parasite counts, and the quantification results of the two real-time assays are significantly correlated for in vitro as well as in vivo samples. However, in comparison to real-time QT-PCR, the results of real-time QT-NASBA can be obtained 12 h earlier, with relatively easy RNA extraction and use of finger prick blood samples. The prospective development of multiplex QT-NASBA for detection of various
P. falciparum
developmental stages increases the value of QT-NASBA for malaria studies. Therefore, for studies requiring sensitive and accurate detection of
P. falciparum
parasites in large numbers of samples, the use of real-time QT-NASBA is preferred over that of real-time QT-PCR.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
122 articles.
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