A Cohort Study on the Duration of Plasmodium falciparum Infections During the Dry Season in The Gambia.

Katharine A Collins ORCID logo; Sukai Ceesay ORCID logo; Sainabou Drammeh; Fatou K Jaiteh; Marc Antoine Guery ORCID logo; Kjerstin Lanke ORCID logo; Lynn Grignard ORCID logo; Will Stone ORCID logo; David J Conway ORCID logo; Umberto D'Alessandro ORCID logo; +2 more... Teun Bousema ORCID logo; Antoine Claessens ORCID logo; (2022) A Cohort Study on the Duration of Plasmodium falciparum Infections During the Dry Season in The Gambia. The Journal of infectious diseases, 226 (1). pp. 128-137. ISSN 0022-1899 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiac116
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BACKGROUND: In areas where Plasmodium falciparum malaria is seasonal, a dry season reservoir of blood-stage infection is essential for initiating transmission during the following wet season. METHODS: In The Gambia, a cohort of 42 individuals with quantitative polymerase chain reaction-positive P falciparum infections at the end of the transmission season (December) were followed monthly until the end of the dry season (May) to evaluate infection persistence. The influence of human host and parasitological factors was investigated. RESULTS: A large proportion of individuals infected at the end of the wet season had detectable infections until the end of the dry season (40.0%; 16 of 40). At the start of the dry season, the majority of these persistent infections (82%) had parasite densities >10 p/µL compared to only 5.9% of short-lived infections. Persistent infections (59%) were also more likely to be multiclonal than short-lived infections (5.9%) and were associated with individuals having higher levels of P falciparum-specific antibodies (P = .02). CONCLUSIONS: Asymptomatic persistent infections were multiclonal with higher parasite densities at the beginning of the dry season. Screening and treating asymptomatic infections during the dry season may reduce the human reservoir of malaria responsible for initiating transmission in the wet season.


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