Use of a Rapid Test for Diagnosis of Dengue during Suspected Dengue Outbreaks in Resource-Limited Regions

Elizabeth A. Hunsperger(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Tyler M. Sharp(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Paul Lalita, Kini Tikomaidraubuta, Yolanda Cardoso, Taina Naivalu, Aalisha Sahu Khan, Maria Marfel(Micronesia Conservation Trust), W. Thane Hancock(Micronesia Conservation Trust), Kay M. Tomashek(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Harold S. Margolis(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
Journal of Clinical Microbiology
May 26, 2016
Cited by 55Open Access
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Abstract

Dengue is major public health problem, globally. Timely verification of suspected dengue outbreaks allows for public health response, leading to the initiation of appropriate clinical care. Because the clinical presentation of dengue is nonspecific, dengue diagnosis would benefit from a sensitive rapid diagnostic test (RDT). We evaluated the diagnostic performance of an RDT that detects dengue virus (DENV) nonstructural protein 1 (NS1) and anti-DENV IgM during suspected acute febrile illness (AFI) outbreaks in four countries. Real-time reverse transcription-PCR and anti-DENV IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay were used to verify RDT results. Anti-DENV IgM RDT sensitivity and specificity ranged from 55.3 to 91.7% and 85.3 to 98.5%, respectively, and NS1 sensitivity and specificity ranged from 49.7 to 92.9% and 22.2 to 89.0%, respectively. Sensitivity varied by timing of specimen collection and DENV serotype. Combined test results moderately improved the sensitivity. The use of RDTs identified dengue as the cause of AFI outbreaks where reference diagnostic testing was limited or unavailable.


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