| Literature DB >> 27543112 |
Zhiyong Zhou1, Rebecca M Mitchell2, Simon Kariuki3, Christopher Odero3, Peter Otieno3, Kephas Otieno3, Philip Onyona3, Vincent Were3, Ryan E Wiegand2, John E Gimnig2, Edward D Walker4, Meghna Desai2, Ya Ping Shi5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although malaria control intervention has greatly decreased malaria morbidity and mortality in many African countries, further decline in parasite prevalence has stagnated in western Kenya. In order to assess if malaria transmission reservoir is associated with this stagnation, submicroscopic infection and gametocyte carriage was estimated. Risk factors and associations between malaria control interventions and gametocyte carriage were further investigated in this study.Entities:
Keywords: Antimalarials; Gametocytes; ITNs; Kenya; Plasmodium falciparum; Risk factors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27543112 PMCID: PMC4992329 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1482-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Positivity of Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia and gametocytaemia among samples tested by study areas
| Assay | Overall (n = 996) | Asembo | Karemo | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smear-positive (n = 221) | Smear-negative (n = 225) | Smear-positive (n = 295) | Smear-negative (n = 255) | ||
| 18S-NASBA, n (%) | 848 (85.1) | 220 (99.6) | 135 (60) | 294 (99.7) | 199 (78.0) |
| Pfs25-NASBA, n (%) | 531 (53.3) | 177 (80.1) | 24 (10.7) | 259 (87.8) | 71 (27.8) |
Fig. 1Weighted prevalence of parasitaemia and gametocytaemia measured by 18S-NASBA and Pfs25-NASBA compared to blood smear method for residents of Asembo and Karemo, western Kenya, 2012. It shows weighted parasite prevalence of 80.2 % by 18S-NASBA (grey filled bars) vs 30.6 % by slide smear (white open bars) and weighted gametocyte prevalence of 44.0 % by Pfs25-NASBA (grey filled bars) vs 2.6 % by slide smear (white open bars)
Fig. 2Gametocyte diversity in human blood samples from Asembo, western Kenya (n = 130), 2012. a shows the frequency of each single allele of gametocytes detected by Pfg377 RT-PCR. The predominant genotype (56.57 %) is allele E (size 357 bp). b shows frequency distribution of Pfg377 alleles per sample. c shows each single band on 4 % electrophoresis gel. d shows the single or multiple bands of Pfg377 region 3. The gels were run with TrackIt™ 50 bp DNA ladders (Thermo Fisher Scientific, MA)
Adjusted odds ratios (aOR) of parasite and gametocyte presence stratified by risk factor and intervention
| aOR | Factor | Overall | Asembo | Karemo |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18S | Age: <5 vs >15 | 1.47 (0.93–2.31) | ||
| Age: 5-15 vs >15 | 2.80 (1.46–5.38)a | |||
| Age <5 vs 5–15 | 0.52 (0.29–0.95)a | |||
| Anaemia vs No Anaemia | NAb | |||
| Fever vs No Fever | 1.21 (0.75–1.95) | |||
| ITN vs No ITN | 0.26 (0.10–0.68)a | 1.08 (0.60–1.93) | ||
| AM vs No AM | 1.02 (0.61–1.70) | |||
| Pfs25 | Age: <5 vs >15 | 1.43 (0.95–2.12) | ||
| Age: 5–15 vs >15 | 3.37 (2.12–5.36)a | |||
| Age: <5 vs 5–15 | 0.42 (0.28–0.64)a | |||
| Anaemia vs No Anaemia | 2.11 (1.52–2.94)a | |||
| Fever vs No Fever | 1.65 (1.11–2.46)a | |||
| ITN vs No ITN | 0.78 (0.54–1.14) | |||
| AM vs No AM | 0.32 (0.21–0.50)a |
Adjusted odds ratios accounting for multivariate comparisons (18S included age, fever, ITN use, anti-malarial use, study area; Pfs25 included age, fever, ITN use, anti-malarial use, study area, and anaemia). Age was stratified by set age categories (<5, 5–15, >15) in an adjusted analysis. Values were presented by overall for all parameters except for ITN vs No ITN for 18S where there was an interaction by study area and risk factor, reporting by area
aStatistically significant
bNot analysed because parasitaemia causes anaemia
Fig. 3Density of parasites and gametocytes and association with risk factors. Mean densities (± 95 % CI) of parasitaemia by 18S (grey filled bars) or gametocytaemia by Pfs25 (white open bars) were estimated by GLM, and presented using observed marginals. Left Y axis is parasites/µL, while right Y axis is gametocytes/µL. The brackets indicates the columns compared. Asterisks indicates that the column is significantly different (p < 0.05) than the second column with same colour for all panels. a Density of parasite and gametocyte was lower in individuals >15 years old than young or old children by 18S and Pfs25 (p < 0.001 for all comparisons). b Gametocytaemia density did not differ between anaemic and non-anaemic (NoAnaemia) individuals. c Parasite density was higher in individuals with fever. d There was no associations of ITN use on density of parasitaemia or gametocytaemia. e Parasite density was lower among individuals who had received anti-malarials (AM) in the past 2 weeks, but gametocyte density was not significantly different between receiving AM and not receiving AM (NoAM)
Fig. 4Association of gametocyte diversity with risk factors among Pfg377 positive individuals. Odds ratios for multiple alleles and 95 % confidence intervals. Grey bars are non- significant, while dark bars indicate significant parameters. Risk factors are on the Y axes and odds ratios on the X axis. A 10-fold increased parasite density as measured by 18S-NASBA was associated with higher odds of having multiple gametocyte alleles, while sleeping under ITNs was associated with lower odds of having multiple gametocyte alleles