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Evaluation of a protein-to-creatinine dipstick diagnostic test for proteinuria screening in selected antenatal care clinics in three Districts in the Bono-East Region of Ghana
•The diagnostic gap for preeclampsia contributes to maternal and newborn mortality.•The PrCr test offers improved detection of proteinuria in antenatal care.•Challenges persist in the identification of low levels of proteinuria. Preeclampsia and eclampsia contribute significantly to maternal and new...
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Published in: | Pregnancy hypertension 2022-12, Vol.30, p.21-30 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •The diagnostic gap for preeclampsia contributes to maternal and newborn mortality.•The PrCr test offers improved detection of proteinuria in antenatal care.•Challenges persist in the identification of low levels of proteinuria.
Preeclampsia and eclampsia contribute significantly to maternal and newborn deaths worldwide. Early and accurate identification of pregnant women at risk can avert these deaths, but the necessary diagnostics are not widely available. A protein and creatinine ratio, rather than a measurement of protein alone, may provide better identification of proteinuria. The objective of this study was to assess the operational and performance characteristics of the LifeAssay Diagnostics (LAD) Test-it™ protein-to-creatinine ratio (PrCr) urinalysis dipstick test in a representative antenatal care setting (ANC).
Mixed methods were used to assess the operational and performance characteristics of the PrCr test, including a usability study with 25 participants, a prospective cross-sectional diagnostic accuracy study (N = 1483), and a targeted reassessment of discordant frozen samples (N = 200). Several other commonly used proteinuria tests were included for comparison.
The test demonstrated improved clinical performance for detection of proteinuria over the current standard-of-care tests widely used in Ghana. The LAD PrCr test showed a sensitivity of 50.7% and specificity of 69.2% when run at the point of care. In contrast, the standard-of-care Accu-Tell® protein dipstick test was found to have a sensitivity of 32.4% and a specificity of 82.2%. The LAD test shows minor improvement over the tests currently used in Ghana to detect proteinuria.
The PrCr test offers the potential for improved detection of proteinuria over the standard-of-care tests used in ANC. However, this test and the others evaluated for this study demonstrate limited performance, particularly among samples with a low level of proteinuria. Additional exploration in other clinical use cases, such as triage among high-risk populations, is warranted. The LAD test can also be considered a transition product, as health systems consider adopting next-generation biomarker tests when more readily available. |
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ISSN: | 2210-7789 2210-7797 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.preghy.2022.07.004 |