Trial Design of a Prospective Multicenter Diagnostic Accuracy Study of a Point-of-Care Test for the Detection of <em>Taenia solium</em> Taeniosis and Neurocysticercosis in Hospital-Based Settings in Tanzania

<i>Taenia solium</i> diagnosis is challenging as trained personnel, good diagnostic tools, and infrastructure is lacking in resource-poor areas. This paper aims to describe the study trial design adopted to evaluate a newly developed rapid point-of-care test that simultaneously detects t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chiara Trevisan, Inge Van Damme, Bernard Ngowi, Veronika Schmidt, Dominik Stelzle, Karen Schou Møller, Mwemezi Kabululu, Charles E. Makasi, Pascal Magnussen, Emmanuel Bottieau, Emmanuel Abatih, Maria V. Johansen, Helena Ngowi, Benedict Ndawi, Kabemba E. Mwape, Gideon Zulu, Pierre Dorny, Andrea S. Winkler, Sarah Gabriël, on behalf of the SOLID Consortium
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Diagnostics
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4418/11/9/1528
Description
Summary:<i>Taenia solium</i> diagnosis is challenging as trained personnel, good diagnostic tools, and infrastructure is lacking in resource-poor areas. This paper aims to describe the study trial design adopted to evaluate a newly developed rapid point-of-care test that simultaneously detects taeniosis and neurocysticercosis (TS POC) in three district hospitals in Tanzania. The two-stage design included three types of patients: patients with specific neurological signs and symptoms (group 1); patients with complaints compatible with intestinal worm infections (group 2); patients with other symptom(s) (group 3). For group 1, all patients were tested using the TS POC test (stage 1), after which all positive, and a subset of negative, patients were selected for laboratory reference tests, clinical examination, and a brain computed tomography (CT) scan (stage 2). For groups 2 and 3, a similar design was adopted, but clinical examination and a brain CT scan (stage 2) were only performed in patients who were TS POC test-positive for cysticercosis. Due to the lack of a gold standard, a Bayesian approach was used to determine test accuracy for taeniosis and cysticercosis. For neurocysticercosis, a composite case definition was used as the reference standard. If successful, this study will help the future developments (commercialization and implementation) of the rapid test and improve patient management and disease prevention.
ISSN:2075-4418