Smartphone-based point-of-care anemia screening in rural Bihar in India

2023 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Smartphone-based point-of-care anemia screening in rural Bihar in India​
Haggenmüller, V.; Bogler, L.; Weber, A.-C.; Kumar, A.; Bärnighausen, T.; Danquah, I. & Vollmer, S.​ (2023) 
Communications Medicine3(1).​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-023-00267-z 

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Authors
Haggenmüller, Verena; Bogler, Lisa; Weber, Ann-Charline; Kumar, Abhijeet; Bärnighausen, Till; Danquah, Ina; Vollmer, Sebastian
Abstract
Abstract Background The high prevalence of anemia in resource-constrained settings calls for easy-to-use, inexpensive screening tools. The Sanguina Smartphone App, an innovative tool for non-invasive hemoglobin estimation via color-sensitive, algorithm-based analysis of fingernail bed images, was validated in the United States. This study evaluates the performance of the App in a population with different socio-economic, ethnic, demographic and cultural composition in rural Bihar, India. Methods For 272 mainly adult patients of a private health centre, hemoglobin measurement with the App is compared with the gold standard laboratory blood analysis. For a second sample of 179 children attending pre-schools, hemoglobin measurement with the App is compared to the results of the HemoCue Hb 301, a point-of-care device using a small blood sample, serving as the reference standard for field-based settings. Results The App reaches ±4.43 g/dl accuracy and 0.38 g/dl bias of comparator values in the clinic-based sample, and ±3.54 g/dl and 1.30 g/dl, respectively in the pre-school sample. After retraining the algorithm with the collected data, the validity of the upgraded version is retested showing an improved performance (accuracy of ±2.25 g/dl, bias of 0.25 g/dl), corresponding to the results of the original validation study from the United States. Conclusions The initial version of the App does not achieve the accuracy needed for diagnosis or screening. After retraining the algorithm, it achieves an accuracy sufficient for screening. The improved version with the potential for further adaptions is a promising easy-to-use, inexpensive screening tool for anemia in resource-constrained point-of-care settings.
Issue Date
2023
Journal
Communications Medicine 
eISSN
2730-664X
Language
English
Sponsor
Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001655
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2023

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