Litcius/Paper detail

Laboratory Detection of Malaria Antigens: a Strong Tool for Malaria Research, Diagnosis, and Epidemiology

Mateusz M. Pluciński, Michael Aidoo, Eric Rogier

2021Clinical Microbiology Reviews28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

spp. have guided the malaria community in research, diagnosis, epidemiology, and other efforts. Recently developed methods for the detection of these proteins (antigens) in the laboratory have provided new types of data that can inform the evaluation of malaria diagnostics, epidemiological investigations, and overall malaria control strategies. Here, the focus is primarily on antigens that are currently known to be detectable in human specimens and on their impact on the understanding of malaria in human populations. We highlight historical and contemporary laboratory assays for malaria antigen detection, the concept of an antigen profile for a biospecimen, and ways in which binary results for a panel of antigens could be interpreted and utilized for different analyses. Particular emphasis is given to the direct comparison of field-level malaria diagnostics and laboratory antigen detection for the development of an external evaluation scheme. The current limitations of laboratory antigen detection are considered, and the future of this developing field is discussed.

Topics & Concepts

MalariaAntigenEpidemiologyImmunologyBiologyPlasmodium falciparumProtozoal diseaseVirologyMedicinePathologyMalaria Research and ControlMosquito-borne diseases and controlComplement system in diseases