Systematic review and meta- analysis of diagnostic tests for diagnosis of melioidosis

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Fairley, Lachlan;Smith, Samuel;Maisrikrod, Shalisa;Henning, Lars
Abstract

Objectives Melioidosis is an emerging tropical disease caused by B. pseudomallei that can rapidly prove fatal and require prompt and appropriate antibiotic treatment. Diagnosis currently relies on culture; however, this delays appropriate antibiotics and contributes to mortality as results can take up to one week or more. Several non-culture based diagnostic tests are available; however, their role remains a point of contention. This review was performed to characterise the accuracy of various diagnostic tests. Methods Medline/Pubmed, CINAHL, Informit, Scopus, The Cochrane Library, Web of Science and Embase databases were searched from inception to April 2020. Clinical trials investigating diagnostic tests capable of providing results in ≤48 hours using samples from suspected human cases; with bacterial culture as the reference test, and reporting sensitivity and specificity were eligible for inclusion. Data was pooled using bivariate analysis for diagnostic tests reported in ≥4 studies. Results 22 publications comprising 10963 individual tests were included. Meta-analysis was able to be performed for immunofluorescence assay (sensitivity 63.8% [95% CI, 45.6–78.7%]; specificity 99.4% [95% CI, 97.2–99.9%]), polymerase chain reaction (sensitivity 77.1 [95% CI, 20.8%–97.8%]; specificity 99.8 [95% CI, 91.6%–100.0%]) and lateral flow immunoassay (sensitivity 58.2% [95% CI, 34.1%–78.9%]; specificity 95.0% [95% CI, 93.3%–96.3%]). Measures of sensitivity were overall similar although specificity of immunofluorescence assay was statistically superior to lateral flow immunoassay. There was a trend for reduced sensitivity of direct detection methods applied to blood samples compared to other sample types, although statistically insignificant. Serological methods were unable to be meta-analysed due to an insufficient number of studies, but their sensitivities were generally higher than direct detection methods (median 84% [IQR 71.5–88%] vs 51% [IQR 39–79%]), however they lacked specificity compared to direct detection (median 82% [IQR 70-86%] vs 98% [IQR 95–100%]). Conclusions Overall, no method showed sensitivity and specificity which would allow it to substitute culture. Serological tests may play a role in ruling out infection in endemic regions given their higher sensitivity, with direct detection methods being used for diagnostic confirmation. Further research into cost-effectiveness and implementation studies are required before diagnostic tests can be introduced clinically in the detection of melioidosis.

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Acta Tropica

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214

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1873-6254

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Pages Count

9

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Elsevier

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DOI

10.1016/j.actatropica.2020.105784