The Hindu - International

How the Widal test clouds India’s sense of its typhoid problem

Because of the Widal test’s propensity for erroneous results, the actual burden of typhoid in India remains obfuscated. A lack of awareness of the proper time at which to collect a blood sample, along with a lack of standardis­ation of kits and poor qualit

- Vasundhara Rangaswamy Parth Sharma

Typhoid spreads through contaminat­ed food and water and is caused by Salmonella typhi. Also known as enteric fever, it presents with a high fever, stomach pain, and weakness

More often than not, the experience for patients with a fever is to get tested and treated for a typhoid infection. The test is a rapid blood test called the Widal test. The subsequent treatment usually consists of tablets, typically in urban areas, or injections in rural ones.

Typhoid spreads through contaminat­ed food and water and is caused by Salmonella typhi and other related bacteria. Also known as enteric fever, it presents with a high fever, stomach pain, weakness, and other symptoms like nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea or constipati­on, and a rash. Some people, called carriers, may remain symptom-free and shed the bacteria in their stool for several months to years.

These symptoms mimic those of malaria, dengue, in uenza, and typhus, to name a few, each with di“erent treatment modalities. If left untreated, typhoid can be life-threatenin­g. Per the World Health Organisati­on, 90 lakh people are diagnosed worldwide with typhoid every year and 1.1 lakh die of it. A small 2023 study reported the burden to be 576-1173 cases per 100,000 child-years (one child year is one child being followed up for one year) in urban areas and 35 per 100,000 child years in rural Pune.

How is typhoid fever diagnosed?

The gold standard for diagnosing typhoid — in addition to a detailed medical history and a thorough examinatio­n — is to isolate the bacteria from a patient’s blood or bone marrow and grow them in the lab. Stool and urine samples can also yield the same but with lower sensitivit­y.

However, performing culture tests in smaller clinical settings presents practical problems. Cultures are time-consuming and skill- and resource-intensive. Prior antibiotic treatment can also a“ect the results of cultures — a common issue due to the indiscrimi­nate use of antibiotic­s in India. Some PCR-based molecular methods are known to be better but are limited by cost, need for specialise­d infrastruc­ture, skilled personnel, and the inability to retrieve live bacteria for further tests.

Against this backdrop, in India, clinicians use the Widal test extensivel­y to diagnose typhoid in both public and private sectors.

As with other infections, our immune system produces antibodies in the blood against the bacteria, causing enteric fever. The Widal test rapidly detects and quantiŸes these antibodies. It’s a point-of-care test and doesn’t need special skills or infrastruc­ture. Developed in the late 1800s by a French physician, it is no longer used in many countries because of its aws — aws that are rendered by the scale of the test’s use in India to be abusive.

Why is Widal inappropri­ate?

A single positive Widal test report doesn’t necessaril­y mean a typhoid infection is present, and a negative report doesn’t conŸrm the disease’s absence. To diagnose an active infection, clinicians must test at least two serum samples taken at least 7-14 days apart, so that they may detect a change in concentrat­ions of the antibodies. But getting two samples is rarely feasible and time-consuming.

Second, in areas with high and continuous typhoid burden, certain levels of antibodies against the bacteria may already be present in the blood. Without knowing the baseline cut-o“, it isn’t possible to correctly interpret the test. A related issue is that di“erent manufactur­ers of the test specify di“erent cut-o“ values in their kits’ user manuals.

Third, the reagents used in the Widal test to reveal the presence of various antibodies can cross-react with antibodies produced against infections by other bacteria, viruses or parasites, or even in typhoid-vaccinated individual­s, leading to false positives. Prior antibiotic therapy can also a“ect antibody levels and yield a false negative.

Correct diagnosis and appropriat­e treatment of enteric fever are important because serious complicati­ons, like severe intestinal bleeding or perforatio­n, can develop within a few weeks if the disease is mismanaged. False negatives can thus delay diagnosis and lead to fatal outcomes.

Consequenc­es of the test’s use

Because of the Widal test’s propensity for erroneous results, the actual burden of typhoid in India remains obfuscated. A lack of awareness of the proper time at which to collect a blood sample, along with a lack of standardis­ation of kits and poor quality-control compound the problem.

Further, a single test costs a couple hundred rupees. Patients in many States have also reported being charged Rs 500 to Rs 4,000 per dose of antibiotic injections by local healthcare providers following a typhoid diagnosis based on a single Widal test. Patients in both urban and rural areas have reported selling assets to receive these antibiotic­s.

The irrational use of antibiotic­s is a major cause of antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR). Bacteria have also been known to be able to transmit AMR between strains and species, and they are not limited by geographic­al borders. This is why the threat of AMR in one country represents the threat of AMR everywhere. Some strains of Salmonella are also resistant to multiple drugs. Continued irrational use of the Widal test, which facilitate­s unnecessar­y use of antibiotic­s, will therefore only make it more and more di cult to control this preventabl­e disease while adding to the Ÿnancial woes of the patients already su“ering.

What is the alternativ­e?

We need to discover better point-of-care tests that can replace the Widal test. And until they’re available, clinicians can consider using best-practice heuristics that provide a rational diagnosis and subsequent treatment options based on the regional data of e“ective antibiotic­s available against the bacteria .

These options should be coupled with ensuring adequate and safe food and water and functional sanitation to address the disease’s root cause.

Improving access to better diagnostic tests could also address this problem. Doing a blood or bone marrow culture is often not feasible as it requires laboratory infrastruc­ture that most parts of the country lack. Healthcare workers can instead beneŸt from a ‘hub and spoke’ model, with sample collection sites at the periphery and district hospitals and medical colleges as the hubs that process samples. The latter facilities could also serve as research centres that generate regional prevalence and susceptibi­lity data.

Next, we need better surveillan­ce to stay on top of the AMR caused by the overuse of the Widal test. The Indian Council for Medical Research publishes an annual report highlighti­ng the typhoid bacteria’s resistance patterns. As per the last report, in 2021, the number of samples tested to report susceptibi­lity ranged from one from the ‘East’ region to 126 samples from the ‘North’.

Finally, as typhoid also has symptom-free carriers, constant environmen­tal vigilance and data-sharing are imperative.

Dr. Vasundhara Rangaswamy is a microbiolo­gist and a rural physician. Dr. Parth Sharma is a public health physician, writer, and researcher.

 ?? TESTALIZE.ME/UNSPLASH ?? The gold standard for diagnosing typhoid is to isolate the bacteria from, say, the blood of a patient and grow them in the lab. Representa­tive image.
TESTALIZE.ME/UNSPLASH The gold standard for diagnosing typhoid is to isolate the bacteria from, say, the blood of a patient and grow them in the lab. Representa­tive image.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India