Journal article
Diagnosis of placental malaria in poorly fixed and processed placental tissue
Y Liu, JB Griffin, A Muehlenbachs, SJ Rogerson, AJ Bailis, R Sharma, DJ Sullivan, AK Tshefu, SH Landis, JMM Kabongo, SM Taylor, SR Meshnick
Malaria Journal | Published : 2016
Open access
Abstract
Background: Placental histopathology has been considered the gold standard for diagnosis of malaria during pregnancy. However, in under-resourced areas placental tissue is often improperly fixed and processed; the resulting formalin pigment is difficult to distinguish from malaria pigment. This study examines two alternative diagnostic methods: polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and a novel immunohistochemistry (IHC)-based method using an antibody against histidine-rich protein 2 (HRP2). Methods: Placental histopathology from 151 pregnant women in Kinshasa was assessed by two blinded microscopists and compared with peripheral blood PCR and IHC for HRP2. The Cohen's kappa coefficients were calcu..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Funding Acknowledgements
We are indebted to the women who participated in the study. Funding was obtained from the NIH (5-T32-AI070114 and 5-R01-AI107949). We would like to thank Ron Gray and the Rakai Community Cohort Study for allowing us to show an IHC slide from a placenta obtained in that study.