| Literature DB >> 28545457 |
Deborah Sumari1,2, Felista Mwingira3, Majige Selemani4,5, Joseph Mugasa6, Kefas Mugittu7, Paul Gwakisa8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria prevalence continues to decline across sub-Saharan Africa as a result of various intervention strategies. However, the diseases still poses a public health concern in the region. While symptomatic malaria is recognized and treated, asymptomatic infections become increasingly important for interrupting transmission. A cross-sectional survey was conducted to assess malaria prevalence in symptomatic and asymptomatic children in Kiwangwa ward in Bagamoyo District in Tanzania.Entities:
Keywords: Asymptomatic malaria; Plasmodium falciparum; Quantitative PCR; Symptomatic malaria; Tanzania
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28545457 PMCID: PMC5445421 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1870-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Primers and probes sequences
| Gene | Primers | 5′ → 3′ | Probe 5′ → 3′ | Labelled |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A-18s | FW | TCCGATAACGAACGAGATCTTAAC | TAGCGGCGAGTACACTATA | FAM-BHQ1 MGB |
| RV | ATTATAGTTACCTATGTTCAATTTCA | |||
| Pfs 25 | FW | GAAATCCCGTTTCATACGCTTG | TGTAAGAATGTAACTTGTGGTAACGGT | HEX-BHQ1 |
| RV | TGCAGTTTTAACAGGATTGCTTGT |
Characteristics of the study population
| Characteristics | Asymptomatic | Symptomatic | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| n | n | ||
| Sex | |||
| Male | 72 (36%) | 91(45.5%) | 0.05 |
| Female | 128 (64%) | 109 (54.5%) | |
| Temperature | |||
| <37.5 °C | 188 (94%) | 66 (33%) | <0.001 |
| ≥37.5 °C | 12 (6%) | 134 (67%) | |
| Mean weight (kg: Min–Max) | 34 (17.6–62) | 20.7 (8.2–48) | |
| Mean age (years: Min–Max | 11 (6–14) | 9 (6–13) | |
When n = number of participants
Malaria prevalence (both sexual and asexual parasitemia) in symptomatic and asymptomatic children
| Symptomatic (95%) | Asymptomatic (95%) | Difference (95%) | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| qPCR | ||||
| Asexual | 89.0 (84.7 to 93.3) | 57.5 (50.6 to 64.4) | 31.5 (23.4 to 39.6) | <0.001 |
| Sexual | 3 (1.6 to 5.4) | 14 (11.2 to 16.6) | −11.0 (−16.4 to −5.6) | <0.001 |
| RDT | ||||
| Asexual | 67.5 (61.0 to 74.0) | 14 (9.2 to 18.8) | 53.5 (45.4 to 61.6) | <0.001 |
| LM | ||||
| Asexual | 64.5 (57.9 to 71.1) | 8 (4.2 to 11.8) | 56.5 (48.9 to 64.1) | <0.001 |
| Sexual | 0.5 (−0.5 to 1.5) | 2 (0.1 to 3.9) | −1.5 (−3.7 to 0.7) | 0.177 |
P value based on two sample test of proportion
Fig. 1Venn diagram showing concordance in diagnostic tools for all malaria positive samples, n = 250
The risk infection between asymptomatic and symptomatic children by the two methods
| Group | QPCR | LM |
|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
| Asexual | Asexual | |
| Symptomatic (Ref.) | 1.0 | 1.0 |
| Asymptomatic | 0.2 (0.1–0.3) | 0.05 (0.03–0.08) |
Sensitivity and specificity of LM and RDT (qPCR as a reference method)
| Type | RDT | LM | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asymptomatic | Symptomatic | Asymptomatic | Symptomatic | |
| Sensitivity | 28/33 (84.8%) | 135/178 (75.8%) | 29/33 (87.9%) | 129/178 (72.5%) |
| Specificity | 167/167 (100%) | 22/22 (100%) | 167/167 (100%) | 22/22 (100%) |