Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (CL) is a neglected tropical disease which is increasingly seen in travelers and migrants evaluated in travel clinics of non-endemic countries. Various CL species are present in different parts of the world, and these different species vary in severity, prognosis and therapeutic approaches. At ITM, diagnosis of CL in suspected patients is done using a skin biopsy, analyzed by diagnostic PCR, and species typing PCR. This method is invasive, and diagnosis is often delayed for days to weeks. The new antigen-based CL Detect Rapid Test uses dental broach sampling and has results within 30 minutes. Dental broach samples left over from the Cl Detect Rapid test may still be used for PCR including species typing. How well the CL Detect Rapid Test performs in the varied population of a travel clinic and whether it is possible to use dental broach sampling for further PCR tests in this population needs to be evaluated The aim of this study is to study the performance of the CL Detect Rapid Test and whether dental broach sampling can replace skin biopsy for CL at ITM.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
6
Dental broach, RDT and PCR
Institute of Tropical Medicine
Antwerp, Belgium
Diagnostic accuracy of CL detect RDT
Against combined reference of microscopy and PCR using skin punch biopsy
Time frame: 2019-2010
Proportion of PCR positives on dental broach sample
Compared to PCR positives on skin punch biopsy
Time frame: 2019-2020
Proportion of successful species typing on dental broach sample
Compared to successful species typing on skin punch biopsy sample
Time frame: 2019-2020
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