Urine metabolites for the identification of Onchocerca volvulus infections in patients from Cameroon.
Vera WewerHelga PeiskerKatharina GutbrodMazen Al-BahraDirk MencheNgongeh Glory AmamboFanny F FombadAbdel Jelil NjouendouKenneth M PfarrSamuel WanjiAchim HoeraufPeter DörmannPublished in: Parasites & vectors (2021)
On an individual level, NATOG alone had poor discriminative power distinguishing infected from non-infected individuals. However, 13.8% of all O. volvulus-infected individuals had NATOG levels never reached by individuals without filarial infections or infected with only L. loa or M. perstans. Discrimination of O. volvulus infections from controls or individuals suffering from multiple infections was improved by the measurement of additional metabolites, e.g. cinnamoylglycine. Thus, measuring a combination of urine metabolites may provide a way to assess onchocerciasis on the population level. This provides the possibility to design a strategy for large-scale onchocerciasis epidemiological screening programs based on urine rather than invasive techniques.