Persistent carriage of subpatent Plasmodium falciparum parasites associated with clinical malaria in a low transmission area in Senegal

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Babacar Souleymane Sambe , Ibrahima Sarr , Aissatou Diagne , Arona Sabène Diatta , Joseph Faye , Nafissatou Diagne , Serigne Ousmane Mbacké Diaw , Adja Fatou Mbodj , Rokhaya Sané , Amélé Nyedzie Wotodjo , Babacar Diouf , Alassane Thiam , Arfang Diamanka , Ngor Faye , Papa Mbacké Sembène , Fatoumata Diene Sarr , Ibrahima Dia , Inès Vigan-Womas , Cheikh Sokhna , Aissatou Toure-Balde , Makhtar Niang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives

In low malaria transmission areas, the elimination of the disease has been hampered partly by the existence of a reservoir of subpatent Plasmodium falciparum infections within communities. This reservoir, often undetected, serves as a source of parasites and contributes to ongoing transmission and clinical malaria cases.

Methods

This study, spanning a period of 9 years from June 2014 to December 2022, examined individual variations and long-term subpatent P. falciparum carriage in two matched cohorts of 44 individuals each living in Dielmo village in the Sudanian area of Senegal. Biannual blood samples, collected in June/July and December of each year, underwent P. falciparum diagnosis by quantitative polymerase chain reaction. QGIS and R analytical tools were used to map infections, assess the occurrence and clustering of subpatent and clinical P. falciparum infections, and determine the risk of infection in the vicinity of asymptomatic P. falciparum carriers.

Results

The point frequency and long-term P. falciparum carriage were significantly higher among the quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) positive cohort compared to the negative cohort across the 16 cross-sectional surveys analyzed in this study (19.76% vs 10.99%, P-value <0.001). Asymptomatic carriage events in qPCR-positive group were 18.86 ± 1.72% and significantly greater (P-value = 0.001) than in the qPCR-negative group (11.32 ± 1.32%). The relative risk of P. falciparum infection or clinical malaria calculated with a 95% confidence interval significantly increased in the vicinity of infected individuals and was 1.44 (P-value = 0.53) and 2.64 (P-value = 0.04) when at least one individual in the direct (household) or indirect (block of households) vicinity is infected, respectively. The risk increased to 3.64 (P-value <0.001) if at least 1/5 of individuals in the indirect vicinity were P. falciparum-infected.

Conclusions

The study provides a detailed qualitative and quantitative analysis of the asymptomatic P. falciparum reservoir and its temporal and spatial dynamics within two subgroups of P. falciparum-infected and non-infected individuals in Dielmo village. It identified high-risk populations known as “hotpops” and hotspots that could be targeted by innovative interventions to accelerate the elimination of malaria in Dielmo village.

塞内加尔低传播地区与临床疟疾相关的恶性疟原虫亚门冬疟原虫持续携带。
目的:在疟疾低传播地区,社区内存在恶性疟原虫亚型感染贮存库,这在一定程度上阻碍了消灭疟疾的进程。这个贮存库往往未被发现,是寄生虫的来源,也是造成疟疾持续传播和临床疟疾病例的原因之一:这项研究从 2014 年 6 月到 2022 年 12 月,历时 9 年,考察了居住在塞内加尔苏丹地区 Dielmo 村的 44 人组成的两个匹配队列中的个体差异和长期恶性疟原虫亚型携带情况。每年 6 月/7 月和 12 月采集的半年期血样通过定量聚合酶链反应进行恶性疟原虫诊断。使用 QGIS 和 R 分析工具绘制感染图,评估亚病原和临床恶性疟原虫感染的发生和聚集情况,并确定无症状恶性疟原虫携带者附近的感染风险:结果:在本研究分析的 16 项横断面调查中,qPCR 阳性队列的点频率和长期恶性疟原虫携带率明显高于阴性队列(19.76% vs 10.99%,p 值 < 0.001)。qPCR 阳性组的无症状携带率为 18.86 ± 1.72%,显著高于 qPCR 阴性组(11.32 ± 1.32%)(p 值 = 0.001)。以 95% 置信区间计算,在感染者附近发生恶性疟原虫感染或临床疟疾的相对风险显著增加,当直接(家庭)或间接(家庭区块)附近至少有一人感染恶性疟原虫时,风险分别为 1.44(p 值 = 0.53)和 2.64(p 值 = 0.04)。如果间接附近至少有 1/5 的人感染恶性疟原虫,则风险增至 3.64(p 值 < 0.001):本研究对 Dielmo 村感染恶性疟原虫和未感染恶性疟原虫的两个亚群中无症状恶性疟原虫库及其时空动态进行了详细的定性和定量分析。该研究确定了热点和热点地区,可针对这些地区采取创新干预措施,以加速在 Dielmo 村消除疟疾。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
18.90
自引率
2.40%
发文量
1020
审稿时长
30 days
期刊介绍: International Journal of Infectious Diseases (IJID) Publisher: International Society for Infectious Diseases Publication Frequency: Monthly Type: Peer-reviewed, Open Access Scope: Publishes original clinical and laboratory-based research. Reports clinical trials, reviews, and some case reports. Focuses on epidemiology, clinical diagnosis, treatment, and control of infectious diseases. Emphasizes diseases common in under-resourced countries.
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