| Literature DB >> 19602275 |
Ivo Müller1, Blaise Genton, Lawrence Rare, Benson Kiniboro, Will Kastens, Peter Zimmerman, James Kazura, Michael Alpers, Thomas A Smith.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In areas where malaria endemicity is high, many people harbour blood stage parasites without acute febrile illness, complicating the estimation of disease burden from infection data. For Plasmodium falciparum the density of parasitaemia that can be tolerated is low in the youngest children, but reaches a maximum in the age groups at highest risk of infection. There is little data on the age dependence of tolerance in other species of human malaria.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19602275 PMCID: PMC2719654 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-8-158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Age-, species-, and parasite density-specific data and results. A: numbers of cases included in the analysis. B: numbers of controls included in the analysis. C: estimated numbers of malaria attributable cases. D: proportions of all cases. E: proportions of malaria specific cases.
Figure 2Prevalence of infection and incidence of disease by age. A: prevalence of infection in controls. B: Incidence of presumptive and attributable malaria cases.
Parasites densities in clinical cases and community controls
| <1 | 9,480 | [640, 39,800] | 3000 | [740, 14,800] |
| 1 | 19,880 | [4,640, >40,000] | 1,200 | [160, 5,360] |
| 2–3 | 21,100 | [5,600, >40,000] | 1,600 | [320, 6,550] |
| 4–6 | 17,220 | [3,520, >40,000] | 680 | [200, 2,560] |
| 7–9 | 14,840 | [2,440, >40,000] | 480 | [160, 1,680] |
| 10–19 | 9,080 | [1,100, 31,460] | 240 | [80, 720] |
| 20+ | 1,600 | [320, 9,610] | 160 | [80, 440] |
| <1 | 4,480 | [240, 15,260] | 120 | [70, 1,520] |
| 1 | 5,540 | [1,360, 12,870] | 480 | [130, 2,960] |
| 2–3 | 4,500 | [920, 12,820] | 440 | [120, 1,600] |
| 4–6 | 2,440 | [320, 9,120] | 200 | [120, 640] |
| 7–9 | 1,280 | [200, 7,480] | 160 | [80, 280] |
| 10–19 | 300 | [80, 3,380] | 80 | [40, 200] |
| 20+ | 120 | [80, 280] | 80 | [40, 160] |
| <1 | 220 | [90, 350] | 80 | [40, 740] |
| 1 | 420 | [120, 1,910] | 200 | [40, 360] |
| 2–3 | 1380 | [210, 3,360] | 320 | [120, 800] |
| 4–6 | 1160 | [450, 3,240] | 320 | [120, 680] |
| 7–9 | 960 | [280, 2,400] | 160 | [80, 360] |
| 10–19 | 440 | [120, 1760] | 120 | [60, 200] |
| 20+ | 120 | [80, 480] | 80 | [40, 160] |
Figure 3Attributable fractions and incidence of disease. A: attributable fractions by age, species and parasite density. B: incidence of attributable illness by age, species and parasite density. Dashed lines correspond to the regressions given in Table 2 with the line for P. falciparum corresponding to the analysis that excludes children < 1 year old.
Figure 4Estimated operating characteristics of cutoffs. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves of density cut-offs for the definition of P. falciparum and P. vivax clinical episodes. Shaded area: Sensitivity and Specificity > 80%. Density cutoffs: filled squares: 200/μl; open diamonds: 800/μl; filled circles: 3,200/μl; open squares 12,800/μl; filled diamonds: 40,000/μl.
Regression parameters for relationship of incidence of attributable disease with parasites density
| -4.29 | [-4.62, -3.97] | 1.33 | [1.24, 1.42] | |
| -5.03 | [-5.62, -4.43] | 1.40 | [1.23, 1.57] | |
| -5.51 | [-6.07, -4.95] | 1.57 | [1.40, 1.73] | |
| -5.75 | [-6.75, -4.75] | 1.56 | [1.26, 1.87] | |