| Literature DB >> 19460160 |
Seif Shekalaghe1, Michael Alifrangis, Charles Mwanziva, Anders Enevold, Steve Mwakalinga, Humphrey Mkali, Reginald Kavishe, Alphaxard Manjurano, Robert Sauerwein, Chris Drakeley, Teun Bousema.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low density Plasmodium falciparum infections, below the microscopic detection limit, may play an important role in maintaining malaria transmission in low endemic areas as well as contribute to the maintenance of acquired immunity. Little is known about factors influencing the occurrence of sub-microscopic parasitaemia or the relation with immune responses.We investigated possible associations between the occurrence of sub-microscopic P. falciparum parasite carriage and antibody responses to the asexual stage antigens, G6PD deficiency and alpha+-thalassaemia in 464 subjects from a low endemic area in northern Tanzania.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19460160 PMCID: PMC2689236 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-9-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
The prevalence of P. falciparum infection by microscopy and QT-NASBA in relation to age
| Parasite prevalence, % (n/N) | <5 years | 5–15 years | >15 years | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microscopy, prevalence (n/N) | 1.8 (11/608) | 2.4 (18/744) | 1.6 (22/1369) | 0.42 |
| Microscopy (selection)* | 1.5 (2/137) | 5.1 (8/156) | 3.1 (5/160) | 0.21 |
| QT-NASBA | 27.0 (37/137) | 36.5 (57/156) | 33.1 (53/160) | 0.22 |
*Selection = only those individuals who also had valid QT-NASBA results. For eleven samples included in the QT-NASBA, no information on age was available.
The prevalence of P. falciparum infection and the frequency of G6PD and α+-thalassaemia variants
| Microscopy | QT-NASBA | |
|---|---|---|
| B | 3.0 (11/366) | 32.2 (118/366) |
| A | 6.7 (3/45) | 35.6 (16/45) |
| A- | 0.0 (0/16) | 37.5 (6/16) |
| α+ – | ||
| αα/αα | 3.7 (11/295) | 30.5 (90/295) |
| αα/α- | 2.0 (2/100) | 40.0 (40/100)¶ |
| α-/α- | 0.0 (0/14) | 14.3 (2/14) |
G6PD B and α-thalassaemia αα/αα served as a reference group for the comparisons. ¶p = 0.08 when compared to α+-thalassaemia αα/αα. Only samples were included in this table that had results for both QT-NASBA and microscopy
P. falciparum specific immune responses in parasite free individuals and individuals with sub-microscopic parasite densities by 18S QT-NASBA
| Parasite free individuals | Sub-microscopic parasite carriers | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| prevalence, % (n/N) | 68.0 (183/269) | 76.7 (89/116) | 0.086 |
| median level (IQR) | 0.26 (0.14 – 0.79) | 0.33 (0.18 – 1.17) | 0.042 |
| prevalence, % (n/N) | 53.4 (134/251) | 58.9 (66/112) | 0.33 |
| median level (IQR) | 0.32 (0.13 – 0.59) | 0.41 (0.19 – 0.72) | 0.034 |
| prevalence, % (n/N) | 61.0 (153/251) | 65.2 (73/122) | 0.44 |
| median level (IQR) | 0.34 (0.17 – 0.99) | 0.48 (0.21 – 1.04) | 0.14 |
Parasitaemia was detected by 18S QT-NASBA and microscopically confirmed parasite carriers were excluded from this table. The optical density in the ELISA was used as indicator of antibody level. P-values are obtained by χ2-test for antibody prevalence or Wilcoxon Rank-sum test for antibody level. The cut-off values for sero-positivity (antibody prevalence) for MSP-1, MSP-2 and AMA-1 were 0.171, 0.292 and 0.252, respectively.