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The complex relationship of exposure to new Plasmodium infections and incidence of clinical malaria in Papua New Guinea

Authors :
Natalie E Hofmann
Stephan Karl
Rahel Wampfler
Benson Kiniboro
Albina Teliki
Jonah Iga
Andreea Waltmann
Inoni Betuela
Ingrid Felger
Leanne J Robinson
Ivo Mueller
Source :
eLife, Vol 6 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2017.

Abstract

The molecular force of blood-stage infection (molFOB) is a quantitative surrogate metric for malaria transmission at population level and for exposure at individual level. Relationships between molFOB, parasite prevalence and clinical incidence were assessed in a treatment-to-reinfection cohort, where P.vivax (Pv) hypnozoites were eliminated in half the children by primaquine (PQ). Discounting relapses, children acquired equal numbers of new P. falciparum (Pf) and Pv blood-stage infections/year (Pf-molFOB = 0–18, Pv-molFOB = 0–23) resulting in comparable spatial and temporal patterns in incidence and prevalence of infections. Including relapses, Pv-molFOB increased >3 fold (relative to PQ-treated children) showing greater heterogeneity at individual (Pv-molFOB = 0–36) and village levels. Pf- and Pv-molFOB were strongly associated with clinical episode risk. Yearly Pf clinical incidence rate (IR = 0.28) was higher than for Pv (IR = 0.12) despite lower Pf-molFOB. These relationships between molFOB, clinical incidence and parasite prevalence reveal a comparable decline in Pf and Pv transmission that is normally hidden by the high burden of Pv relapses. Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02143934

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f964c3a008f041f0a3a67f96e82c6abc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.23708