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Blood culture-PCR to optimise typhoid fever diagnosis after controlled human infection identifies frequent asymptomatic cases and evidence of primary bacteraemia.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Darton, Thomas C 
Zhou, Liqing 
Blohmke, Christoph J 
Jones, Claire 
Waddington, Claire S 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Improved diagnostics for typhoid are needed; a typhoid controlled human infection model may accelerate their development and translation. Here, we evaluated a blood culture-PCR assay for detecting infection after controlled human infection with S. Typhi and compared test performance with optimally performed blood cultures. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Culture-PCR amplification of blood samples was performed alongside daily blood culture in 41 participants undergoing typhoid challenge. Study endpoints for typhoid diagnosis (TD) were fever and/or bacteraemia. Overall, 24/41 (59%) participants reached TD, of whom 21/24 (86%) had ≥1 positive blood culture (53/674, 7.9% of all cultures) or 18/24 (75%) had ≥1 positive culture-PCR assay result (57/684, 8.3%). A further five non-bacteraemic participants produced culture-PCR amplicons indicating infection; overall sensitivity/specificity of the assay compared to the study endpoints were 70%/65%. We found no significant difference between blood culture and culture-PCR methods in ability to identify cases (12 mismatching pairs, p = 0.77, binomial test). Clinical and stool culture metadata demonstrated that additional culture-PCR amplification positive individuals likely represented true cases missed by blood culture, suggesting the overall attack rate may be 30/41 (73%) rather than 24/41 (59%). Several participants had positive culture-PCR results soon after ingesting challenge providing new evidence for occurrence of an early primary bacteraemia. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Overall the culture-PCR assay performed well, identifying extra typhoid cases compared with routine blood culture alone. Despite limitations to widespread field-use, the benefits of increased diagnostic yield, reduced blood volume and faster turn-around-time, suggest that this assay could enhance laboratory typhoid diagnostics in research applications and high-incidence settings.

Description

Keywords

Controlled human infection model, Diagnostics, Febrile disease, Polymerase chain reaction, Salmonella Typhi, Typhoid fever, Adolescent, Adult, Asymptomatic Infections, Bacteremia, Blood Culture, Culture Media, DNA, Bacterial, Female, Fever, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Salmonella typhi, Sensitivity and Specificity, Typhoid Fever, Young Adult

Journal Title

J Infect

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0163-4453
1532-2742

Volume Title

74

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (092661/Z/10/Z)