Summary
Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is a considerable clinical problem in neutropenic patients with haematological malignancies but its diagnosis remains difficult. We prospectively evaluated a LightCyclerTM polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay, a nested‐PCR assay and a galactomannan (GM) enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to validate their significance in diagnosing IA. During 205 treatment episodes in 165 patients from six centres, a nested‐PCR assay and GM testing was performed at regular intervals. Positive nested‐PCR results were quantified by a LightCyclerTM PCR assay. Patient episodes were stratified according to the 2002 European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer/Mycosis Study Group consensus criteria and the PCR and serology results were correlated with the clinical diagnostic classification. Sensitivity and specificity rates for the nested‐PCR assay were up to 63·6% [95% confidence interval (CI): 30·8–89%) and 63·5% (95% CI: 53·4–72·7%) respectively, and 33·3% and 98·9% (95% CI: 7·5–70·1% and 94·2–99·9%) for GM respectively. The LightCyclerTM PCR assay yielded positive results in 21·4%, lacking discrimination by quantification across the different clinical categories. In this prospective comparison, PCR was superior to GM with respect to sensitivity rates. In patients at high risk for IA, positive results for Aspergillus by PCR of blood samples are highly suggestive for IA and contribute to the diagnosis.
Summary
OBJECTIVETo study the quality of diagnostic practice in rural Burkina Faso. METHOD In 9 health centres of 3 districts, 313 outpatient consultations were observed, and 417 diagnoses by 15 nurses were analysed. Criteria for evaluation of patient history and clinical examination were based on the diagnostic guidelines distributed by the Ministry of Health. RESULTS In only 20% of the diagnoses the nurses took a sufficient history and in only 40% they conducted a sufficient clinical examination. In 21% patients underwent no clinical examination at all. Only 12% of all diagnoses were based on sufficient history-taking and adequate clinical examinations. The individual elements of clinical examination were performed correctly in 82% of cases. The variation between nurses was immense, but no correlation could be found with regard to their basic training. However, nurses who had received the diagnostic guidelines examined patients more carefully than those who had not. Larger numbers of patients per day are not associated with shorter nurse-patient contact, and neither is sufficiency of patient history associated with duration of the consultation. CONCLUSION The low diagnostic quality of the outpatient consultations in the studied area indicates that this issue has been neglected in national public health initiatives. But examination skills are good and diagnostic guidelines may have had a positive effect on the diagnostic quality.keywords diagnosis, history taking, Burkina Faso correspondence Dr Gérard Krause,
Abstract. Pregnancy is associated with a greater susceptibility to Plasmodium falciparum infections, which may result in serious complications affecting both the mother and the fetus. To compare allelic diversity and multiplicity of infection in the same women during and outside pregnancy, we conducted a retrospective analysis of the monthly fingerprick blood samples collected during a longitudinal survey conducted in Ndiop, a Senegalese village with mesoendemic malaria. Merozoite surface protein-1 (msp1) block 2 and merozoite surface protein-2 (msp2) genotypes were determined for 308 blood samples collected from 20 women. Pregnancy was associated with a significantly higher prevalence of P. falciparum infection, higher parasite densities, and a higher multiplicity of infection. The highest multiplicity of infection was observed in the youngest pregnant women. Because of co-linearity, it was not possible to dissociate the impact of age from that of parity on multiplicity of infection. Some individual msp1 and msp2 alleles showed a highly skewed pregnancy-associated distribution. These results indicate that pregnancy is associated with increased permissiveness to a large number of clones, as well as with infection by specific genotypes.
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