- Hsiang, Michelle;
- Ntshalintshali, Nyasatu;
- Kang Dufour, Mi-Suk;
- Dlamini, Nomcebo;
- Nhlabathi, Nomcebo;
- Vilakati, Sibonakaliso;
- Malambe, Calsile;
- Zulu, Zulisile;
- Maphalala, Gugu;
- Novotny, Joseph;
- Murphy, Maxwell;
- Schwartz, Alanna;
- Sturrock, Hugh;
- Gosling, Roly;
- Dorsey, Grant;
- Kunene, Simon;
- Greenhouse, Bryan
BACKGROUND: Reactive case detection (RACD) is a widely practiced malaria elimination intervention whereby close contacts of index cases receive malaria testing to inform treatment and other interventions. However, the optimal diagnostic and operational approaches for this resource-intensive strategy are not clear. METHODS: We conducted a 3-year prospective national evaluation of RACD in Eswatini, a malaria elimination setting. Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) was compared to traditional rapid diagnostic testing (RDT) for the improved detection of infections and for hotspots (RACD events yielding ≥1 additional infection). The potential for index case-, RACD-, and individual-level factors to improve efficiencies was also evaluated. RESULTS: Among 377 RACD events, 10 890 participants residing within 500 m of index cases were tested. Compared to RDT, LAMP provided a 3-fold and 2.3-fold higher yield to detect infections (1.7% vs 0.6%) and hotspots (29.7% vs 12.7%), respectively. Hotspot detection improved with ≥80% target population coverage and response times within 7 days. Proximity to the index case was associated with a dose-dependent increased infection risk (up to 4-fold). Individual-, index case-, and other RACD-level factors were considered but the simple approach of restricting RACD to a 200-m radius maximized yield and efficiency. CONCLUSIONS: We present the first large-scale national evaluation of optimal RACD approaches from a malaria elimination setting. To inform delivery of antimalarial drugs or other interventions, RACD, when conducted, should utilize more sensitive diagnostics and clear context-specific operational parameters. Future studies of RACDs impact on transmission may still be needed.