Multi-Laboratory Evaluation of a Scrub Typhus Diagnostic Kit
- 1 September 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
- Vol. 43 (3) , 301-307
- https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.1990.43.301
Abstract
Scrub typhus is a major cause of febrile illness throughout the Asia-Pacific region. It is commonly undiagnosed, partly because of the lack of a simple, reliable diagnostic test which can be used in clinical laboratories. The indirect immunoperoxidase technique, configured into a test kit, was provided to technicians who were trained in its use. They used the kit during a 2 year field trial in their respective clinical hospital laboratories throughout Malaysia. In an evaluation using 1, 722 consecutive sera tested in those laboratories, the kit was found to have a median sensitivity for IgG detection of 0.85 (range 0.33–0.95), a median specificity of 0.94 (range 0.88–1.00), reproducibility of 0.86, and efficiency of 0.92 when compared to the reference laboratory. In a proficiency survey in which 10 laboratories received 3 coded test samples, all but 2 laboratories had results within 1 dilution of the reference laboratory in quantitating specific IgG, whereas 7 laboratories were within 1 dilution in quantitating IgM. The shelf life of the kit was at least 1 year at 4°C.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- III. Application of Principles of Test Selection and InterpretationAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1981
- Scrub Typhus in South VietnamAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1973