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Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 43(3), 1990, pp. 301-307
Copyright © 1990 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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Multi-Laboratory Evaluation of a Scrub Typhus Diagnostic Kit

Daryl J. Kelly, P. W. Wong, Elsie Gan, Chan Teik Chye, David Cowan AND George E. Lewis,, Jr
U.S. Army Medical Research Unit, Institute for Medical Research, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Washington, DC

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.







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Copyright © 1990 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.