| Literature DB >> 31075171 |
Katherine O'Flaherty1,2, Ricardo Ataíde1,3, Sophie G Zaloumis2, Elizabeth A Ashley4,5, Rosanna Powell1, Gaoqian Feng1,6, Linda Reiling1, Arjen M Dondorp4,5, Nicholas P Day4,5, Mehul Dhorda4,5,7,8,9, Rick M Fairhurst10, Pharath Lim10, Chanaki Amaratunga10, Sasithon Pukrittayakamee11, Tran Tinh Hien5,12, Ye Htut13, Mayfong Mayxay5,14,15, M Abul Faiz16,17, James G Beeson1,18,19, Francois Nosten4,20, Julie A Simpson2, Nicholas J White4,5, Freya J I Fowkes1,2,21,22.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antibodies to the blood stages of malaria parasites enhance parasite clearance and antimalarial efficacy. The antibody subclass and functions that contribute to parasite clearance during antimalarial treatment and their relationship to malaria transmission intensity have not been characterized.Entities:
Keywords: Malaria; antibody; artemisinin; drug resistance; immunity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31075171 PMCID: PMC6735958 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiz247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Characteristics of Study Participants
| Age, y | Parasite Density, Parasites/μL | PC½, h | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country, Study Site | Participants, No. | Median (IQR) | Range | Male Sex, % | Median (IQR) | Range | Median (IQR) | Range | PC½ ≥ 5 h, Participants, % (Proportion) | Parasitemia at d 3, Participants, % (Proportion) |
|
| Bangladesh | |||||||||||
| Ramu | 49 | 26 (20–35) | 10–55 | 86 (42/49) | 32 154 (19 594–50 868,) | 10 048–224 196 | 2.60 (2–3.2) | 0.7–5.4 | 2 (1/49) | 2 (1/48) | 0 (0/49) |
| Cambodia | |||||||||||
| Pursat | 120 | 25 (19–33) | 3–60 | 91 (109/120) | 56 583 (35 670–107 576) | 9797–284 861 | 5.60 (4.3–6.7) | 1.7–11.8 | 61 (73/119) | 71 (85/119) | 66 (76/115) |
| Preah Vihear | 120 | 20 (14–29) | 4–58 | 68 (82/120) | 56 583 (42 704–86 162) | 13 942–311 237 | 3 (2.5–4.2) | 1.2–12.6 | 22 (26/120) | 24 (29/120) | 19 (22/113) |
| Ratanikiri | 120 | 14 (9–19.5) | 2–55 | 65 (78/120) | 62 109 (32 844–94 702) | 5024–310 860 | 3 (2.3–3.5) | 0.7–8.8 | 6 (7/120) | 9 (11/118) | 3 (4/116) |
| Pailin | 99 | 25 (19–38) | 10–57 | 87 (86/99) | 45 216 (25 748–87 543) | 3712–389 988 | 6.10 (4.9–7.2) | 2.4–9 | 74 (71/96) | 73 (71/97) | 80 (79/99) |
| Laos | |||||||||||
| Attapeu | 93 | 23 (14–29) | 6–60 | 69 (64/93) | 50 240 (27 255–90 432) | 10 048–198 574 | 2 (1.6–2.7) | 1.1–9.2 | 6 (5/84) | 11 (10/92) | 3 (3/92) |
| Myanmar | |||||||||||
| Shwe Kyin | 79 | 24 (19–31) | 1–54 | 82 (65/79) | 66 066 (27 088–115 552) | 10 640–420 006 | 3.10 (2.6–4.1) | 1.3–8.6 | 13 (10/77) | 15 (12/78) | 22 (17/77) |
| Thailand | |||||||||||
| Mae Sot | 120 | 29 (22.5–37) | 18–58 | 78 (94/120) | 37 178 (17 584–83 273) | 2560–327 062 | 4.90 (3.7–6.4) | 0.6–10.1 | 50 (58/117) | 45 (53/118) | 51 (60/117) |
| Srisaket | 41 | 29 (22–38) | 16–54 | 100 (41/41) | 31 902 (13 062–75 360) | 4346–192 997 | 6.95 (4.3–8.7) | 1.6–13.9 | 67 (24/36) | 68 (23/34) | 83 (30/36) |
| Ranong | 23 | 33 (26–39) | 19–53 | 70 (16/23) | 40 192 (24 618-80 384) | 5903-94 451 | 5.30 (3.5–6.4) | 2.4–13.8 | 59 (13/22) | 60 (12/20) | 65 (13/20) |
| Vietnam | |||||||||||
| Binh Phuoc | 120 | 26 (18.5–38.5) | 3–61 | 77 (92/120) | 49 738 (23 864–96 084) | 9797–205 230 | 3.10 (1.9–5.3) | 0.7–8.9 | 28 (33/118) | 32 (38/118) | 24 (28/117) |
Abbreviations: IQR, interquartile range; PC½, parasite clearance half-life.
Figure 1.Seroprevalences, with 95% confidence intervals, of erythrocyte-binding antigen (EBA-175; A), merozoite surface protein 2 (MSP-2; B), and MSP-142 (C) immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) and IgG3 and circumsporozoite protein (CSP) IgG across study sites. Seropositivity was defined as an OD greater than or equal to the mean value + 2 SDs for a panel of unexposed Melbourne donors. Study sites are ordered from fastest to slowest median parasite clearance half-life (in hours).
Figure 2.Seroprevalences, with 95% confidence intervals, for C1q fixation on recombinant merozoite surface protein 2 (MSP-2; A) and opsonic phagocytosis of whole merozoites (3D7; B) across study sites. Seropositivity was defined as an OD greater than or equal to the mean value + 2 SDs for a panel of unexposed Melbourne donors for C1q fixation. Opsonic-phagocytosis seropositivity was defined as a relative phagocytosis index (%) greater than or equal to the mean value + 3 SDs for a panel of unexposed Melbourne donors. Study sites are ordered from fastest to slowest median parasite clearance half-life (in hours).
Association Between Antibody Seroprevalence and Artemisinin Resistance Outcomes
| PC½, h | PC½ ≥ 5 h | Parasitemia at d 3 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody | Mean Value, | Mean Differenceb (95% CI) |
| ORb (95% CI) |
| ORb (95% CI) |
|
| EBA-175 IgG1 | 3.72 | −0.30 (−1.15–.55) | .46 | 0.85 (.48–1.52) | .60 | 0.91 (.49–1.67) | .75 |
| EBA-175 IgG3 | 3.96 | −0.64 (−.98 to −.31) | .002 | 0.57 (.41–.78) | <.001 | 0.62 (.46–.83) | .002 |
| MSP-2 IgG1 | 3.72 | −0.32 (−1.28–.64) | .48 | 0.81 (.39–1.68) | .57 | 0.92 (.52–1.64) | .79 |
| MSP-2 IgG3 | 3.87 | −0.51 (−.96 to −.05) | .03 | 0.65 (.39–1.06) | .09 | 0.58 (.34–.99) | .05 |
| MSP-142 IgG1 | 3.66 | 0.13 (−.21–.47) | .42 | 1.12 (.85–1.46) | .43 | 1.14 (.86–1.52) | .35 |
| MSP-142 IgG3 | 3.92 | −0.47 (−.88 to −.05) | .03 | 0.60 (.44–.81) | .001 | 0.65 (.51–.81) | <.001 |
| C1q fixation | 3.80 | −0.45(−.80 to −.09) | .02 | 0.48 (.36–.65) | <.001 | 0.49 (.37–.66) | <.001 |
| Phagocytosisc | 5.22 | −1.16 (−2.17 to −.14) | .03 | 0.34 (.14–.85) | .02 | 0.52 (.29–.93) | .03 |
Estimates were determined by multivariate linear and logistic regression, adjusted for age and artesunate monotherapy dosage and robust standard errors for study site clustering.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; EBA, erythrocyte-binding antigen; IgG, immunoglobulin G; MSP, merozoite surface protein; OR, odds ratio; PC½, parasite clearance half-life.
aData are for seronegative individuals (average age, 26 years) who received 2 mg/kg artesunate monotherapy.
bData are adjusted for age and artesunate monotherapy dosage and robust standard errors for study site clustering.
cData are for a subset of Thai and Cambodian study sites (n = 643).