| Literature DB >> 25967134 |
Josea Rono1,2, Anna Färnert3, Linda Murungi4, John Ojal5, Gathoni Kamuyu6, Fatuma Guleid7, George Nyangweso8, Juliana Wambua9, Barnes Kitsao10, Ally Olotu11, Kevin Marsh12,13, Faith Ha Osier14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epidemiological studies indicate that some children experience many more episodes of clinical malaria than their age mates in a given location. Whether this is as a result of the micro-heterogeneity of malaria transmission with some children effectively getting more exposure to infectious mosquitoes than others, or reflects a failure in the acquisition of immunity needs to be elucidated. Here, we investigated the determinants of increased susceptibility to clinical malaria by comparing the intensity of exposure to Plasmodium falciparum and the acquisition of immunity in children at the extreme ends of the over-dispersed distribution of the incidence of clinical malaria.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25967134 PMCID: PMC4445794 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0354-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1Inclusion of children into the malaria-free, single-episode and multiple-episodes groups. The gray-shaded boxes indicate the number of children included in the three groups investigated in this study.
Figure 2Distribution of clinical malaria episodes per child among children in the multiple-episodes group. The histogram shows the number of children (y axis) within the multiple-episodes group with a given number of clinical malaria episodes (x axis) between September 1998 and October 2003.
Baseline characteristics
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| Number | 12 | 26 | 35 |
| Age, median age in years (IQR) | 1.67 (1.36 to 2.12) | 1.52 (1.21 to 2.21) | 1.78 (1.38 to 2.41) |
| Sex, number female (%) | 4 /12 (33.33) | 8/26 (30.77) | 15/35 (42.86) |
| Hemoglobin AS, number (%)a,b | 3 (27.27) | 4 (17.39) | 1 (3.13) |
| Proportion of cross-sectional surveys at which children were parasite positive by microscopy, proportion (%) | 7.5 | 8 | 24.26 |
| Malaria exposure index, median (IQR)c | 0.39 (0.31 to 0.50) | 0.54 (0.47 to 0.73) | 0.65 (0.52 to 0.76) |
aData available for 11, 23 and 32 children in the malaria-free, single-episode and multiple-episodes groups respectively. bThere was a non-significant trend towards a larger proportion of children in the malaria-free group compared to single-episode and multiple-episodes groups having the sickle cell trait (Fisher’s exact test P = 0.054). cData available for 10, 21 and 24 children in the malaria-free single-episode and multiple-episodes groups respectively. Age is at the first sampling point in September 1998. IQR, interquartile range.
Figure 3Temporal change in age and parasite prevalence during the study period. The plot shows the median age in years (left y axis) of the children included in this study, the parasite prevalence rates in malaria-free (blue circles), single-episode (green triangles) and multiple-episodes (red squares) groups of children as well as the overall parasite prevalence (black circles) in children 2- to 10-years old (PfPR 2–10) in the entire Ngerenya cohort at the six cross-sectional surveys.
Figure 4Antibody and P. falciparum infection profiles of individual children. The plots show the levels of IgG antibodies (y axis) to a panel of merozoite antigens at each of the six cross-sectional surveys (x axis) conducted between 1998 and 2003. The black solid arrows indicate the time during follow up when an individual child was parasitemic by microscopy. Asterisks indicate the time during follow up when a child had an episode of clinical malaria. The open triangles along the x axis indicate either the cross-sectional surveys when a child was aparasitemic or the weekly follow up visits when a child was symptomatic but found to be aparasitemic by microscopy. Red and blue arrows along the x-axis indicate the cross-sectional surveys at which a child was infected with P. falciparum clones of the IC-1 or FC msp2 types, respectively. Panel A-B, C–E and F–I show the profiles of children belonging to the malaria-free, single-episode and multiple-episodes groups, respectively. Ages are reported as at baseline, that is, in September 1998. IgG, immunoglobulin G.
Figure 5Distribution of antibody titers to individual merozoite antigens among the three groups of children. The panels show the distribution of antibody titers (median and interquartile range) in the malaria-free (blue circles), single-episode (green triangles) and multiple-episodes (red squares) groups of children at six cross-sectional surveys for the respective antigens: A) MSP-119, B) MSP-2_Dd2, C) MSP-2_CH150/9, D) MSP-3_3D7, E) AMA-1_FVO, F) AMA-1_3D7 and G) PfRh2. ‘NC’ refers to antibody titers in sera from P. falciparum-naïve adults (used here as negative controls). ‘PHIS’ refers to antibody titers in a pool of hyperimmune sera (used here as a positive control). The black bold dotted line shows the ‘threshold’ antibody concentrations to respective antigens that were calculated as described in the Results section. The thin dotted blue line shows the ‘seropositivity cut off’ based on the mean plus two standard deviations of the antibody titer obtained with the negative control sera.
Temporal change in antibody titers among the three groups of children
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| MSP-119 | Malaria-free | Reference group | - | - | - |
| Single-episode | −2.00 (−11.27 – 7.27) | −2.68 (−12.03 – 6.74) | −1.93 (−10.32 – 6.46) | −2.58 (−11.10 – 5.93) | |
| Multiple-episodes | −2.54 (−11.37 – 6.28) | −2.54 (−12.91 – 5.59) | −3.82 (−11.85 – 4.20) | −4.93 (−13.34 – 3.49) | |
| Single-episode versus Multiple-episodes | 0.54 (−5.88 – 6.96) | 0.99 (−5.52 – 7.50) | 1.89 (−4.02 – 7.80) | 2.35 (−4.02 – 7.80) | |
| MSP-2_Dd2 | Malaria-free | Reference group | - | - | - |
| Single-episode | 0.43 (−5.01 - 5.86) | 0.29 (−5.27 - 5.864) | 0.24 (−4.28 - 5.66) | 0.19 (−5.17 - 5.55) | |
| Multiple-episodes | 1.90 (−3.01 – 7.35) | 1.90 (−3.55 – 7.36) | 1.33 (−3.69 – 6.36) | 0.94 (−4.34 – 6.23) | |
| Single-episode versus Multiple-episodes | −1.74 (−5.53– 2.06) | −1.62 (−5.50– 2.26) | −0.93 (−4.65– 2.79) | −0.75 (−4.55– 3.05) | |
| MSP-2_CH150/9 | Malaria-free | Reference group | |||
| Single-episode | 0.24 (−9.37 - 9.86) | 0.35 (−10.21 - 9.50) | 0.41 (−8.77 - 9.59) | 0.34 (−9.72 - 9.05) | |
| Multiple-episodes | 6.75 (−2.39 – 15.89) | 5.83 (−3.87– 15.53) | 3.87 (−4.91– 12.66) | 2.68 (−6.62– 11.99) | |
| Single-episode versus Multiple-episodes | −6.51 (−13.00– 0.02) | −6.18 (−12.79– 0.43) | −3.46 (−12.79– 0.43) | −3.02 (−9.47– 3.42) | |
| MSP-3_3D7 | Malaria-free | Reference group | - | - | - |
| Single-episode | −2.42 (−7.17 - 2.31) | −2.23 (−7.10- 2.63) | −2.37 (−7.04- 2.30) | −2.37 (−7.03- 2.55) | |
| Multiple-episodes | −0.50 (−5.02 – 4.02) | −0.20 (−4.98 – 4.57) | −1.20 (−5.67 – 3.26) | −0.99 (−5.72 – 3.72) | |
| Single-episode versus Multiple-episodes | −1.93 (−5.24 – 1.38) | −2.03 (−5.43 – 1.37) | −1.17 (−4.48 – 2.15) | −1.24 (−4.64 – 2.17) | |
| AMA-1_FVO | Malaria-free | Reference group | - | - | - |
| Single-episode | −3.71 (−12.55 - 5.14) | −4.32 (−13.32 – 4.68) | −3.64 (−12.48 – 5.20) | −3.76 (−13.24 – 4.72) | |
| Multiple-episodes | 3.87 (−5.54 – 12.30) | 2.87 (−5.97 – 11.71) | 3.10 (−5.35 – 11.56) | 3.10 (−6.82– 10.94) | |
| Single-episode versus Multiple-episodes |
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| AMA-1_3D7 | Malaria-free | Reference group | |||
| Single-episode | −2.83 (−10.37 - 4.71) | −3.43 (−11.09 - 4.23) | −2.79 (−10.30 - 4.72) | −3.37 (−10.99 - 4.25) | |
| Multiple-episodes | 3.17 (−4.02 – 10.35) | 2.17 (−5.36 – 9.70) | 2.83 (−4.34 – 10.01) | 1.85 (−5.68 – 9.38) | |
| Single-episode versus Multiple-episodes |
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| −5.22 (−10.60 – 1.52) | |
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| Malaria-free | Reference group |
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| Single-episode | −5.50 (−13.21 - 2.27) | −5.79 (−13.71 - 2.12) | −5.42 (−13.22 - 2.38) | −5.77 (−13.74 - 2.19) | |
| Multiple-episodes | −1.72 (−9.09 – 5.64) | −2.25 (−10.03 – 5.54) | −1.99 (−9.44 – 5.48) | −2.57 (−10.46 – 5.32) | |
| Single-episode versus Multiple-episodes | −3.74 (−9.03 – 1.54) | −3.55 (−8.92 – 1.83) | −3.44 (−8.86 – 1.99) | −3.21 (−8.73 – 2.32) | |
aAdjusted for sickle cell trait (hemoglobin AS). bAdjusted for whether a child was parasitemic or aparasitemic by microscopy at each of the six cross-sectional surveys. cAdjusted for sickle cell trait and whether a child was parasitemic or aparasitemic by microscopy at each of the six cross-sectional surveys. The coefficients indicate differences in the rates of change of antibody titers comparing the single- and multiple-episodes groups to the malaria-free group. Antibodies to AMA1_FVO increased significantly over five years when comparing the multiple- to the single-episode group. For all other antigens, the rates of change in antibody titers were not significant during this period. CI, confidence interval. *P < 0.05.