Changing Trends in P. falciparum Burden, Immunity, and Disease in Pregnancy.

Alfredo Mayor; Azucena Bardají; Eusebio Macete; Tacilta Nhampossa; Ana Maria Fonseca; Raquel González; Sonia Maculuve; Pau Cisteró; Maria Rupérez; Joe Campo; +15 more... Anifa Vala; Betuel Sigaúque; Alfons Jiménez; Sonia Machevo; Laura de la Fuente; Abel Nhama; Leopoldina Luis; John J Aponte; Sozinho Acácio; Arsenio Nhacolo; Chetan Chitnis; Carlota Dobaño; Esperanza Sevene; Pedro Luis Alonso; Clara Menéndez; (2015) Changing Trends in P. falciparum Burden, Immunity, and Disease in Pregnancy. The New England journal of medicine, 373 (17). pp. 1607-1617. ISSN 0028-4793 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1406459
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BACKGROUND: Prevention of reinfection and resurgence is an integral component of the goal to eradicate malaria. However, the adverse effects of malaria resurgences are not known. METHODS: We assessed the prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum infection among 1819 Mozambican women who delivered infants between 2003 and 2012. We used microscopic and histologic examination and a quantitative polymerase-chain-reaction (qPCR) assay, as well as flow-cytometric analysis of IgG antibody responses against two parasite lines. RESULTS: Positive qPCR tests for P. falciparum decreased from 33% in 2003 to 2% in 2010 and increased to 6% in 2012, with antimalarial IgG antibody responses mirroring these trends. Parasite densities in peripheral blood on qPCR assay were higher in 2010-2012 (geometric mean [±SD], 409±1569 genomes per microliter) than in 2003-2005 (44±169 genomes per microliter, P=0.02), as were parasite densities in placental blood on histologic assessment (50±39% of infected erythrocytes vs. 4±6%, P<0.001). The malaria-associated reduction in maternal hemoglobin levels was larger in 2010-2012 (10.1±1.8 g per deciliter in infected women vs. 10.9±1.7 g per deciliter in uninfected women; mean difference, -0.82 g per deciliter; 95% confidence interval [CI], -1.39 to -0.25) than in 2003-2005 (10.5±1.1 g per deciliter vs. 10.6±1.5 g per deciliter; difference, -0.12 g per deciliter; 95% CI, -0.67 to 0.43), as was the reduction in birth weight (2863±440 g in women with past or chronic infections vs. 3070±482 g in uninfected women in 2010-2012; mean difference, -164.5 g; 95% CI, -289.7 to -39.4; and 2994±487 g vs. 3117±455 g in 2003-2005; difference, -44.8 g; 95% CI, -139.1 to 49.5). CONCLUSIONS: Antimalarial antibodies were reduced and the adverse consequences of P. falciparum infections were increased in pregnant women after 5 years of a decline in the prevalence of malaria. (Funded by Malaria Eradication Scientific Alliance and others.).


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