Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Light microscopy and rapid diagnostic tests are the two commonly used methods for malaria diagnosis that rely on the direct use of unprocessed blood samples. However, both methods do not have the level of sensitivity required for malaria diagnosis in cases of low density parasitaemia. We report here the diagnostic performance of a whole blood-based reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification method for Plasmodium falciparum malaria diagnosis in apparently healthy blood donors and febrile neonates in Cameroon. The presence of malaria parasites in whole blood samples was determined by light microscopy, antigen-based rapid diagnostic test (RDT), and by RT-LAMP using a “lyse and amplify” experimental protocol. Of the 256 blood donors tested, 36 (14.1%) were positive for malaria parasites by light microscopy, 38 (14.8%) were positive by RDT whereas 78 (30.5%) were positive by RT-LAMP. Only light microscopy and RT-LAMP detected infection among the febrile neonates (279 neonates, median age: 2 days, range: 1–9 days), with positivity rates of 8.6% and 12.2%, respectively. The overall concordance between the three methods were 75.9% for RT-LAMP and light microscopy, 75.1% for RT-LAMP and RDT, and 83.9% for light microscopy and RDT. Blood parasite densities were significantly lower in the neonates (mean: 97.6, range: 61–192 parasites/μL) compared to the blood donors (mean: 447.8, range: 63–11 000 parasites/μL). Together, the study demonstrates the usefulness of whole blood RT-LAMP for use in rapid pre-screening of blood donors and suspected neonates to avert severe consequences of P. falciparum infections.
Malaria is a vector borne disease caused by protozoan parasites of the genus Plasmodium. Vector transmission of malaria parasites that occurs during the blood meal of an infected female anopheles mosquito is the most common mode of transmission [1, 2]. However, other modes of transmission exist, including vertical transmission from infected mothers to their unborn babies (congenital malaria) [3–6], and horizontal transmission from infected blood donors to their recipients (transfusion-transmitted malaria) [7–9]. In fact, both congenital and transfusion-transmitted malarias are common and represent significant public health problems, particularly in areas with high stable transmission of Plasmodium falciparum [5, 7, 9, 10]. In either case, the most effective preventive measure is the proactive testing and treatment of infected blood donors and pregnant women, thereby preventing onward transmission of the parasite. Alternatively, early diagnosis and prompt treatment of blood recipients or infected neonates is the most effective strategy for averting serious complication of the disease in such vulnerable groups. Diagnosing malaria in asymptomatic blood donors or pregnant women, as well as early diagnosis in non-immune babies and blood recipients is challenging due to the extremely low parasite densities that characterize such patient groups [11–13]. In addition, it is pertinent to note that most cases of neonate malaria are misdiagnosed initially because of limited awareness about congenital malaria, lack of user-friendly and high sensitivity tests capable of detecting low level infections in such patient groups, and the generally non-specific nature of early-stage malaria symptoms.
Traditionally, malaria diagnosis is established by the microscopic detection of parasites on Giemsa-stained thick or thin blood smears, or using one of several antigen-based immunochromatographic methods otherwise known as rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) [14]. Although considered the “gold standard” for malaria diagnosis in hyper-endemic countries, microscopy-based methods for malaria diagnosis are highly unreliable, particularly in patients with low density parasitaemia (<50 parasites/ μl of blood) [15, 16]. Additionally, the method is time-consuming and labor-intensive [16]. Similarly, immunochromatographic methods, although user-friendly, are not sensitive enough for use in point-of-need diagnosis of low-density malaria parasitaemia (sensitivity limits > 100 parasites/μl of blood) [17].
The most reliable approach for diagnosing low-density parasitaemia is by use of molecular methods such as PCR and loop-mediated isothermal nucleic acid amplification methods [14]. Indeed, recent advances in PCR-based methods allow the detection of less than 1 parasite/μl of blood [18, 19], making the method highly appropriate for use in cases of low level parasitaemia. However, PCR-based methods are expensive and laborious, requiring a purification step to eliminate polymerase inhibitors that are commonly found in body fluids [13, 20, 21]. An alternative but more recent molecular approach for malaria diagnosis is the loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) that may be employed on purified DNA or RNA [22, 23], or directly on whole blood samples [24]. At least two LAMP-based methods for malaria diagnosis have been reported, with sensitivity limits in the range of (0.2–0.08) and turnaround times similar to that of rapid diagnostic tests procedure [14, 24]. We aim in this study to compare the diagnostic performances of a recently developed RT-LAMP method for malaria [24], with routine microscopy and RDT in the detection of P. falciparum amongst asymptomatic blood donors and febrile neonates in a hyper-endemic zone in Cameroon.
A cross-sectional study was conducted at the Neonatology Unit of the Yaounde Central Hospital from June 2018 to November 2018 to assess the prevalence of congenital malaria in the city of Yaounde, and at the Blood Bank Unit of the Yaounde University Teaching Hospital from July 2019 to September 2019 to determine the frequency of malaria parasite contamination of transfusable blood products in the area. The inclusion criteria were febrile neonates of age <10 days reporting to nearby health facilities for medical consultation, and healthy looking adult blood donors. Written informed consents were obtained from participants or their legal representatives.
Ethical approval of the study was obtained from the Committee on Human Subjects Research of the Catholic University of Central Africa in Yaounde, Cameroon (protocol number 2018/0698/CEIRSH/ESS/MIM). Administrative approvals were obtained from heads of the participating health facilities.
A non-random sampling technique was used to select the study participants. Approximately 60 μl of leftover blood samples, collected by hospital staff for routine medical analysis or destined for the blood bank during the study period, were obtained at each collection site. Thick blood films (5 μl of whole blood) were prepared and stained using 10% Giemsa solution for 15 minutes. The films were analyzed by light microscopy (Leica DM750, Tokyo) using a 100X oil immersion objective. Slides were considered negative if parasites were undetected after a count of 1000 leucocytes. Parasitaemia was determined by assuming a leucocyte count of 8000 white blood cells/μl of blood. All slides were analyzed by at least by two microscopists. In case of a discordant result, a third reading was done by an independent expert microscopist.
The Malaria Ag Pf/pan RDT kit was used for P. falciparum-specific antigen detection, following the manufacturer’s instructions (Standard Diagnostic Inc., South Korea). Infection with P. falciparum was also detected by RT-LAMP using the whole blood protocol as previously described [24]. Briefly, blood samples were diluted (1:50) in a lysis buffer comprising 10 mM Tris-buffered saline, pH 7.4, 0.2% Triton X-100, and 0.1% bovine serum albumin and kept standing at room temperature for 2 minutes. The lysate (2.5 uL) were immediately added to a reaction mix comprising 2 μl of pre-mixed primers, 15 μL of reconstituted enzyme (ISO-DR001, OptiGene, UK) and 5.5 μl of DEPC-treated water. The RT-LAMP reaction was then realized at 68°C for 45 minutes using a Genie II real-time amplifier. An RT-LAMP inactivation/annealing step of 98–70°C with ramp at 0.1°C per minute was included, and the derived melting curves used to verify the reaction specificity. Samples were considered positive if resulting in an amplification peak with a characteristic annealing temperature of ~86.5°C.
Data were entered into Microsoft Office Excel and analyzed using Graphpad and an online statistical tool (https://www.medcalc.org/calc/diagnostic_test.php) for descriptive statistics that comprised test positivity rates, accuracy, relative sensitivities and specificities. Differences between diagnostic test methods were determined using the McNemar’s test for paired data, considering P values less than 0.05 as statistically significant.
A total of 279 neonates (median age: 2 days, range: 1–9 days, males: 54.5%) reporting with a fever for consultation in various health facilities in Yaounde, and a total of 256 volunteer blood donors (median age; 25 years, range; 19–45 years, males: 73.3%) were screened for P. falciparum infection by light microscopy, RDT and whole blood-based RT-LAMP. Of the 279 neonates tested, 24 (8.6%) were positive by light microscopy, 34 (12.2%) were positive by RT-LAMP and none (0%) were positive by RDT. Similarly, 14.1% of the 256 blood donors were positive for P. falciparum infection by light microscopy, 30.5% were positive by RT-LAMP and 14.8% by RDT. The mean parasite densities in the light microscopy positive samples were 97.6 (range: 61–192) parasites/μl of blood in neonates and 447.8 (range: 63–11 000) parasites/μl in blood donors. Overall, the malaria positivity rates in the two study groups combined were 11.2% for light microscopy, 21.1% for RT-LAMP and 7.1% for RDT. Additionally, the proportion of submicroscopic infections detected by RT-LAMP or RDT, were 17.0% and 6.0%, respectively, indicating a better performance of RT-LAMP as a screening test for P. falciparum infections in such population groups.
Of the 535 neonates and blood donors tested by all three methods, 406 produced similar results (22 positives and 384 negatives) between light microscopy and RT-LAMP, resulting in a calculated concordance of 75.9% between the two methods. The concordance between light microscopy and RDT was 83.9%, whereas the concordance between RDT and RT-LAMP was 75.1%. Of the discordant pairs (Table 1), 70.5% (91/129) were positive by RT-LAMP but negative by light microscopy (P<0.0001), 78.2% (104/133) were positive by RT-LAMP but negative by RDT (P<0.0001), and 62.8% were positive by light microscopy but negative by RDT (P = 0.02). Together, these findings show an overall good agreement between the various methods, and a better performance of RT-LAMP over light microscopy and RDT in terms of test positivity rates.

| Negative | LM | RT-LAMP | RDT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | |||
| LM | - | 38 (29.5%) | 54 (62.8%) |
| RT-LAMP | 91 (70.5%) | - | 104 (78.2%) |
| RDT | 32 (37.2%) | 29 (21.8%) | - |
As shown in Table 2, the accuracy with which RT-LAMP detected malaria parasite infection was 75.89% (95%CI; 72.03% - 79.45%) when compared to light microscopy, and 75.14% (95%CI: 71.25% - 78.75%) when compared to RDT. The sensitivity of RT-LAMP determined amongst the light microscopy positive samples was 36.7% (95%CI: 24.59% - 50.10%), and 23.7% (95%CI: 11.44% - 40.24%) when determined based on RDT positives. Similarly, the specificity of RT-LAMP as determined amongst the light microscopy negative samples was 80.8% (95%CI: 77.01% - 84.29%), and 79.1% (95%CI: 75.23% - 82.57%) when determined amongst the RDT negative samples. Taken together, the data show high accuracy of RT-LAMP when compared to either light microscopy or RDT, reflecting a high overall probability of correctly classifying P. falciparum infected neonates and blood donors using the whole blood RT-LAMP method.

| Comparator method | RT-LAMP | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Accuracy [95%CI] | Relative sensitivity [95%CI] | Relative specificity [95%CI] | |
| Light microscopy | 75.89% [72.03% - 79.45%] | 36.7% [24.59% - 50.10%] | 80.8% [77.01% - 84.29%] |
| RDT | 75.14% [71.25% - 78.75%] | 23.7% [11.44% - 40.24%] | 79.1% [75.23% - 82.57%] |
Accurate and early diagnosis of malaria followed by prompt treatment is the only way to avert serious complications of congenitally transmitted malaria in neonates and transfusion-transmitted malaria. This study was conducted to compare the performance of a recently developed RT-LAMP method with light microscopy and RDT for use in the diagnosis of both congenital and transfusion-transmitted malaria in resource-limited environments.
Interestingly, the whole blood RT-LAMP out-performed both light microscopy and RDT in terms of infection detection rates in both study populations. The proportion of diagnosed malaria cases by RT-LAMP was about twice the proportion of cases by either light microscopy or RDT among the blood donors, and 1.4 times greater than malaria cases by light microscopy in the febrile neonates. This increased proportion of RT-LAMP positives may be attributed to the extremely low detection limit (0.08 parasites/μl whole blood) of the new method [24], and the fact that most of the identified cases (neonates and blood donors) presented with extremely low parasite densities. RDT, with a P. falciparum detection limit over 100 parasites/μl was negative in all neonate samples tested. The prevalence of malaria in the neonate group (8.6% by light microscopy and 12.2% by RT-LAMP) are similar to recent reports in the South West Region of Cameroon where 14.4% prevalence of congenital malaria by microscopy has been reported [3], and significantly low when compared to earlier reports in Calabar, Nigeria where the prevalence of congenital malaria among neonates with suspected sepsis was 35% [25]. The observed decrease in congenital malaria prevalence in our study population can be attributed to widespread implementation of intermittent malaria preventive measures in the country that include obligatory sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine administration and bed net use among pregnant women as from their first trimester. The obtained prevalence of malaria among the blood donors is similar to recent observations by Okalla et al. [10] using light microscopy wherein a prevalence of 14.1% was reported among blood donors in the littoral region of Cameroon.
Despite the high positivity rate of whole blood RT-LAMP when compared to light microscopy and RDT, concordance between the different tests were high (>75%), indicating that all three methods may be used interchangeable in the study population. However, RT-LAMP produced the highest proportion of test positives when comparing the discordant pairs, suggesting that the method is suitable as a screening test for P. falciparum infection in both study populations. RT-LAMP was highly accurate (>75% accuracy) in identifying light microscopy and RDT confirmed malaria cases. However, despite the high specificity (~80%) when compared to light microscopy or RDT, the sensitivity performances of whole blood RT-LAMP were low (36.7% relative to light microscopy and 23.7% relative to RDT). These observations contrast previous findings by Kemleu et al. [24], wherein a sensitivity of 90% was reported when determined among RT-PCR positives. This discrepancy may be due to reduced reliability of both light microscopy and RDT in patients with low density parasitaemia and in recently treated participants.
In conclusion, this study demonstrates the usefulness of whole blood malaria RT-LAMP for use in malaria diagnosis among blood donors and in suspected neonates. Additionally, the study confirms the occurrence of congenital malaria as well as the high prevalence of P. falciparum infections in blood samples destined for transfusion in the city of Yaounde, Cameroon, thereby requiring policy changes in order to avert serious complications of both congenital and transfusion-transmitted malaria in the country.
We thank the medical staff and study participants at the Yaounde Central Hospital, and at the University Teaching Hospital for their participation in this study.
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