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Article Abstract

Malaria remains a significant cause of childhood morbidity and mortality, with Histidine-Rich Protein 2 (HRP2)-based malaria rapid diagnostic tests (mRDTs) widely used in endemic regions where microscopy is sometimes not feasible. While these tests offer high sensitivity, persistent HRP2 antigenemia and gene deletions can cause false-positive and false-negative results, compromising their accuracy for malaria case management and surveillance. This study evaluated the diagnostic performance and antigen persistence of HRP2-mRDTs using data from a longitudinal birth cohort of 750 children followed monthly from birth to 36 months in a holoendemic region of Kenya. Malaria diagnosis was performed using both microscopy and mRDTs, with a total of 15,006 clinical events recorded from 573 children between 2017 and 2023. Data from an independent acute febrile cohort of 937 children (<5 years) followed for 14 days was analyzed to validate the findings. The mRDT showed a high sensitivity of 97.27% but a moderate specificity of 65.00% in acute febrile illness, indicating frequent false-positive results. The positive predictive value was low (35.10%), suggesting that confirmatory testing is needed, while the negative predictive value was high (98.89%), reinforcing the reliability of mRDTs in ruling out malaria. Persistent HRP2 antigenemia was observed, with a median antigen clearance time of 51.14 days, respectively. Higher initial parasite densities (>50,000/μL) were associated with a slower antigen decay rate ( = 0.001), highlighting the challenge of interpreting positive mRDT results after treatment. Validation using the acute febrile cohort showed that mRDT specificity exceeded 95% at initial diagnosis and follow-up. Overall, HRP2-based mRDTs remain valuable for frontline malaria diagnosis but are limited by antigen persistence, leading to false positives in follow-up testing. Where feasible, integration of confirmatory diagnostic methods, such as microscopy or molecular assays, could improve the performance of malaria case management and clinical decision making, particularly in high-transmission settings.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12137159PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/ebm.2025.10585DOI Listing

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