| Literature DB >> 28747199 |
Fabián E Sáenz1, Andrea Arévalo-Cortés2, Gabriela Valenzuela2, Andrés F Vallejo3, Angélica Castellanos3, Andrea C Poveda-Loayza2, Juan B Gutierrez4, Alvaro Alvarez5, Yi Heng Yan4, Yoldy Benavides5, Luis Enrique Castro6, Myriam Arévalo-Herrera3,7, Sócrates Herrera3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The recent scale-up in malaria control measures in Latin America has resulted in a significant decrease in the number of reported cases in several countries including Ecuador, where it presented a low malaria incidence in recent years (558 reported cases in 2015) with occasional outbreaks of both Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax in the coastal and Amazonian regions. This success in malaria control in recent years has led Ecuador to transition its malaria policy from control to elimination.Entities:
Keywords: Asymptomatic malaria; Ecuador; Elimination; Knowledge attitude and practices
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28747199 PMCID: PMC5530496 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1947-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1General trend of malaria in Ecuador 2001–2014. A 99% decrease in malaria cases is shown since the year 2001 for total cases (green line) as well as those caused by each of the main parasite species: P. vivax (blue line) and P. falciparum (red line)
Fig. 2Study area. The study was performed in four locations in the Esmeraldas province (green) in Ecuador (red) which are indicated by color dots on the map
Study communities: geographical and population characteristics
| Locations | Altitude (m.a.s.l) | Average yearly rainfall (mm) | Average temperature (°C) | Population (inhabitants) | Community type | Dominant ethnicity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| El Pedregal | 9 | 2549 | 26.0 | 240 | Semi-urban | African–Ecuatorians |
| Ricaurte | 20 | 2553 | 25.9 | 1300 | Semi-urban | African–Ecuatorians |
| La Boca | 21 | 2474 | 26.0 | 580 | Rural | African–Ecuatorians |
| El Guadual | 600 | 2544 | 25.6 | 250 | Rural | Mestizo |
Fig. 3Plasmodium prevalence in the study area by qPCR. a Distribution of malaria infections in the study area. The size of the circles represents malaria prevalence, with P. vivax in blue and P. falciparum in red. b Percentage of Plasmodium cases by qPCR in the four study communities. El Pedregal had the highest prevalence while Ricaurte had the lowest. c P. vivax and P. falciparum prevalence. P. vivax was the most prevalent parasite in the study area. El Guadual had the highest amount of P. falciparum infections. d Parasitaemia distribution in the four study communities. Parasitaemia varied between 1 and 800 parasites/µl
Fig. 4Percentage of antibody responders by ELISA. Percentages of antibody respondents to the indicated malaria antigens are shown as bars for the indicated study sites. The antibody response percentages broadly correlated with the malaria prevalence in each of the study sites. Indeed, El Pedregal had a higher percentage of responders for all antigens and a higher malaria prevalence
IFA positivity in PCR positive samples
| Location | n = (PCR+) | IFA positive | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| El Pedregal | 23 | 22 | 96 |
| El Guadual | 4 | 2 | 50 |
| Ricaurte | 4 | 4 | 100 |
| La Boca | 17 | 14 | 82 |
| Total | 48 | 42 | 87.5* |
* Average percentages
Fig. 5Estimated risk of malaria for La Boca (top row), El Pedregal (middle row), and Ricaurte (bottom row). The risk maps (right column) show the correlation between human population density and malaria cases, thus identifying the places where interventions might have the greatest impact. El Guadual was not included in this analysis because the number of samples was too small to perform the algorithm