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Innovative methodology for point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen with rapid urine concentration for use in the field for detecting low Schistosoma mansoni infection and for control of cure with high accuracy.

Background: Prior to eliminating schistosomiasis, efforts must address accurate and fast individual diagnosis. Diagnosis is still inaccurate by parasitological and point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen (POC-CCA) in areas of low endemicity.

Methods: Our group has optimized POC-CCA with a 30 min urine concentration step with no need for specialized technicians or equipment and with high accuracy. We evaluated this new method, called POC-CCA filter (FLT), in two Brazilian endemic areas with distinct profiles.

Results: At baseline, POC-CCA had a poor performance with several false results and undefined trace readings, revealing a prevalence rate of 10% against a rate of 23% for POC-CCA FLT, which was similar to the parasitological rates. Accuracy increased from as low as 0.36 to 0.96 after urine concentration in one area. POC-CCA properly diagnosed only half of the cases at three post-treatment time points, while POC-CCA FLT was able to diagnose 96, 83 and 100%, respectively.

Conclusions: The improvement of conventional POC methodology by a fast and simple urine concentration step provided not only an increase in its accuracy before and after praziquantel treatment, but also preserved its applicability in low-prevalence endemic areas, allowing the definition of trace readings as negative cases.

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