Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/132329
Title: Usefulness of Serial Blood Sampling and PCR Replicates for Treatment Monitoring of Patients with Chronic Chagas Disease
Author: Parrado, Rudy
Ramírez, Juan Carlos
Barra, Anabelle de la
Alonso-Vega, Cristina
Juiz, Natalia
Ortiz, Lourdes
Illanes, Daniel
Torrico, Faustino
Gascón i Brustenga, Joaquim
Alves, Fabiana
Flevaud, Laurence
García, Lineth
Schijman, Alejandro G.
Ribeiro, Isabela
Keywords: Malaltia de Chagas
Assaigs clínics
Chagas' disease
Clinical trials
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: American Society for Microbiology
Abstract: This work evaluated a serial blood sampling procedure to enhance the sensitivity of duplex real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) for baseline detection and quantification of parasitic loads and posttreatment identification of failure in the context of clinical trials for treatment of chronic Chagas disease, namely, DNDi-CHE1224-001 (ClinicalTrials.gov registration no. NCT01489228) and the MSF-DNDi PCR Sampling Optimization Study (NCT01678599). Patients from Cochabamba (n 294), Tarija (n 257), and Aiquile (n 220) were enrolled. Three serial blood samples were collected at each time point, and qPCR triplicates were tested for each sample. The first two samples were collected during the same day and the third one 7 days later. A patient was considered PCR positive if at least one qPCR replicate was detectable. Cumulative results of multiple samples and qPCR replicates enhanced the proportion of pretreatment sample positivity from 54.8% to 76.2%, 59.5% to 77.8%, and 73.5% to 90.2% in Cochabamba, Tarija, and Aiquile cohorts, respectively. This strategy increased the detection of treatment failure from 72.9% to 91.7%, 77.8% to 88.9%, and 42.9% to 69.1% for E1224 low-, short-, and high-dosage regimens, respectively, and from 4.6% to 15.9% and 9.5% to 32.1% for the benznidazole arm in the DNDi-CH-E1224-001 and MSF-DNDi studies, respectively. The addition of the third blood sample and third qPCR replicate in patients with nondetectable PCR results in the first two samples gave a small, non-statistically significant improvement in qPCR positivity. No change in clinical sensitivity was seen with a blood volume increase from 5 to 10 ml. The monitoring of patients treated with placebo in the DNDi-CH-E1224-001 trial revealed fluctuations in parasitic loads and occasionally nondetectable results. In conclusion, a serial sampling strategy enhanced PCR sensitivity to detecting treatment failure during follow-up and has the potential for improving recruitment capacity in Chagas disease trials, which require an initial positive qPCR result for patient admission.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1128/AAC.01191-18
It is part of: Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 2019, vol. 63, num. 2, p. e01191
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/132329
Related resource: http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1128/AAC.01191-18
ISSN: 0066-4804
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (ISGlobal)

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