巴布亚新几内亚初次感染间日疟原虫后出现急性疾病和复发的可能性。

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q1 PARASITOLOGY
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases Pub Date : 2025-10-03 eCollection Date: 2025-10-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pntd.0013567
Amanda Ross, Cristian Koepfli, Lincoln Timinao, Diggory Hardy, Tobias Thüring, Melanie Loeffel, Benson Kiniboro, Ingrid Felger, Ivo Mueller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

接种间日疟原虫疟疾寄生虫可导致原发性感染的血期感染和肝期寄生虫或非循环分裂子的复发。了解初次感染和复发后的临床疾病风险将为监测和干预策略提供信息,但在流行地区生活的人群中,这种可能性是不确定的。一个主要的困难在于无法区分原发感染和复发。在这项研究中,我们估计临床疾病的概率使用不同的季节模式的原发感染和复发。对巴布亚新几内亚Ilaita市1至3岁儿童进行了16个多月的疾病随访(发热,寄生虫≥500 /µl),每两周进行主动和被动病例检测,每两个月进行一次血期感染。对每两个月时间段、年龄组、村庄和ITN使用类别的原发性感染和复发人数的估计来自先前使用基因分型数据的分析。在这项研究中,我们使用贝叶斯统计模型将观察到的间日疟原虫临床病例数量与每个协变量类别的预期原发性感染和复发数量联系起来。我们将自出生以来经历的原发性感染的累积数量作为获得性免疫的代理。为了反映不确定性,我们对复发是否会在不同情况下导致疾病使用不同的假设。随着初次感染的累积人数的增加,患病的概率呈指数递减。复发后疾病的估计概率低于原发感染的估计概率,低多少取决于如何定义。在同一窝中,较晚复发的概率往往比较早复发的概率低。据估计,随着季节的变化,复发占该队列中间日疟原虫疾病的一半,尽管占血液期感染力量的80%。这些结果可以为间日疟原虫负担的估计提供信息,并为预测干预措施影响的数学模型提供基础。由临床病例引发的干预措施将侧重于近期感染病例和获得性免疫力较低的年龄组。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The probability of Plasmodium vivax acute illness following primary infection and relapse in Papua New Guinea.

Inoculation with Plasmodium vivax malaria parasites can lead to blood-stage infections from the primary infection and relapses from liver-stage parasites or non-circulating merozoites. Understanding the risk of clinical illness following primary infection and relapse would inform surveillance and intervention strategies, but the probabilities are uncertain in people living in endemic areas. A major difficulty lies in the inability to distinguish primary infections and relapses. In this study, we estimate the probabilities of clinical illness using the different seasonal patterns of primary infection and relapse. Children aged one to three years in Ilaita, Papua New Guinea, were followed up over 16 months for illness (fever with ≥500 parasites/µl) with fortnightly active and passive case detection, and for blood-stage infection every two months. Estimates of the number of primary infections and relapses for each two-month time-period, age-group, village and ITN use category were derived from previous analyses using genotyping data. In this study, we use a Bayesian statistical model to relate the number of observed P. vivax clinical cases in each covariate category to the expected numbers of primary infections and relapses. We include the cumulative number of primary infections experienced since birth as a proxy for acquired immunity. To reflect uncertainty, we use varying assumptions about whether relapses can cause illness in different circumstances. The probability of illness decayed exponentially with increasing cumulative numbers of primary infections experienced. The estimated probability of illness following relapses was lower than that for primary infection, how much lower depended on how they were defined. Later relapses within the same brood tended to have lower probabilities than earlier ones. Varying seasonally, relapses were estimated to contribute half of P. vivax illness in this cohort despite accounting for 80% of the force of blood-stage infection. The results can inform estimates of the burden of P. vivax and provide building blocks for mathematical models for predicting the impact of interventions. Interventions triggered by clinical cases would focus on more recent infections and age-groups with less acquired immunity.

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来源期刊
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases PARASITOLOGY-TROPICAL MEDICINE
自引率
10.50%
发文量
723
期刊介绍: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases publishes research devoted to the pathology, epidemiology, prevention, treatment and control of the neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), as well as relevant public policy. The NTDs are defined as a group of poverty-promoting chronic infectious diseases, which primarily occur in rural areas and poor urban areas of low-income and middle-income countries. Their impact on child health and development, pregnancy, and worker productivity, as well as their stigmatizing features limit economic stability. All aspects of these diseases are considered, including: Pathogenesis Clinical features Pharmacology and treatment Diagnosis Epidemiology Vector biology Vaccinology and prevention Demographic, ecological and social determinants Public health and policy aspects (including cost-effectiveness analyses).
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