Malaria and Chikungunya Detected Using Molecular Diagnostics Among Febrile Kenyan Children

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Date
2017-05-22Author
Waggoner, Jesse
Brichard, Julie
Mutuku, Francis
Ndenga, Bryson
Heath, Claire Jane
Mohamed-Hadley, Alisha
Sahoo, Malaya K
Vulule, John
Lefterova, Martina
Banaei, Niaz
Mukoko, Dustan
Pinsky, Benjamin A
LaBeaud, A Desiree
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Show full item recordAbstract
Background.
In  sub-Saharan  Africa,  malaria  is  frequently  overdiagnosed  as  the  cause  of  an  undifferentiated  febrile  illness,  whereas arboviral illnesses are presumed to be underdiagnosed.
Methods. 
Sera from 385 febrile Kenyan children, who presented to 1 of 4 clinical sites, were tested using microscopy and real-time molecular assays for dengue virus (DENV), chikungunya virus (CHIKV), malaria, and Leptospira
.
Results. 
Malaria was the primary clinical diagnosis for 254 patients, and an arboviral infection (DENV or CHIKV) was the pri-mary diagnosis for 93 patients. In total, 158 patients (41.0%) had malaria and 32 patients (8.3%) had CHIKV infections. Compared 
with  real-time  polymerase  chain  reaction,  microscopy  demonstrated  a  percent  positive  agreement  of  49.7%.  The  percentage  of  malaria cases detected by microscopy varied significantly between clinical sites. Arboviral infections were the clinical diagnosis for patients on the Indian Ocean coast (91 of 238, 38.2%) significantly more often than patients in the Lake Victoria region (2 of 145, 1.4%; P < .001). However, detection of CHIKV infections was significantly higher in the Lake Victoria region (19 of 145 [13.1%] vs 13 of 239 [5.4%]; P = .012).
Conclusions.
The clinical diagnosis of patients with an acute febrile illness, even when aided by microscopy, remains inaccurate in malaria-endemic areas, contributing to inappropriate management decisions