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非洲间日疟原虫的传播

Plasmodium vivax Transmission in Africa.

作者信息

Howes Rosalind E, Reiner Robert C, Battle Katherine E, Longbottom Joshua, Mappin Bonnie, Ordanovich Dariya, Tatem Andrew J, Drakeley Chris, Gething Peter W, Zimmerman Peter A, Smith David L, Hay Simon I

机构信息

Spatial Ecology and Epidemiology Group, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.

Center for Global Health and Diseases, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015 Nov 20;9(11):e0004222. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004222. eCollection 2015 Nov.

Abstract

Malaria in sub-Saharan Africa has historically been almost exclusively attributed to Plasmodium falciparum (Pf). Current diagnostic and surveillance systems in much of sub-Saharan Africa are not designed to identify or report non-Pf human malaria infections accurately, resulting in a dearth of routine epidemiological data about their significance. The high prevalence of Duffy negativity provided a rationale for excluding the possibility of Plasmodium vivax (Pv) transmission. However, review of varied evidence sources including traveller infections, community prevalence surveys, local clinical case reports, entomological and serological studies contradicts this viewpoint. Here, these data reports are weighted in a unified framework to reflect the strength of evidence of indigenous Pv transmission in terms of diagnostic specificity, size of individual reports and corroboration between evidence sources. Direct evidence was reported from 21 of the 47 malaria-endemic countries studied, while 42 countries were attributed with infections of visiting travellers. Overall, moderate to conclusive evidence of transmission was available from 18 countries, distributed across all parts of the continent. Approximately 86.6 million Duffy positive hosts were at risk of infection in Africa in 2015. Analysis of the mechanisms sustaining Pv transmission across this continent of low frequency of susceptible hosts found that reports of Pv prevalence were consistent with transmission being potentially limited to Duffy positive populations. Finally, reports of apparent Duffy-independent transmission are discussed. While Pv is evidently not a major malaria parasite across most of sub-Saharan Africa, the evidence presented here highlights its widespread low-level endemicity. An increased awareness of Pv as a potential malaria parasite, coupled with policy shifts towards species-specific diagnostics and reporting, will allow a robust assessment of the public health significance of Pv, as well as the other neglected non-Pf parasites, which are currently invisible to most public health authorities in Africa, but which can cause severe clinical illness and require specific control interventions.

摘要

历史上,撒哈拉以南非洲地区的疟疾几乎完全归因于恶性疟原虫(Pf)。撒哈拉以南非洲大部分地区目前的诊断和监测系统并非旨在准确识别或报告非Pf人类疟疾感染情况,导致缺乏关于其重要性的常规流行病学数据。达菲阴性的高流行率为排除间日疟原虫(Pv)传播的可能性提供了依据。然而,对包括旅行者感染、社区患病率调查、当地临床病例报告、昆虫学和血清学研究在内的各种证据来源的审查与这一观点相矛盾。在此,这些数据报告在一个统一的框架中进行加权,以根据诊断特异性、个别报告的规模以及证据来源之间的相互印证,反映本土Pv传播证据的强度。在所研究的47个疟疾流行国家中,有21个报告了直接证据,而42个国家存在旅行者感染情况。总体而言,18个国家有中度至确凿的传播证据,分布在非洲大陆的各个地区。2015年,非洲约有8660万达菲阳性宿主面临感染风险。对在这个易感宿主频率较低的大陆上维持Pv传播的机制进行分析发现,Pv患病率报告与传播可能仅限于达菲阳性人群的情况一致。最后,讨论了明显的达菲非依赖型传播的报告。虽然在撒哈拉以南非洲大部分地区,Pv显然不是主要的疟疾寄生虫,但此处提供的证据凸显了其广泛存在的低水平地方性流行。提高对Pv作为潜在疟疾寄生虫的认识,再加上转向针对物种的诊断和报告的政策转变,将有助于对Pv以及其他被忽视的非Pf寄生虫的公共卫生重要性进行有力评估,这些寄生虫目前对非洲大多数公共卫生当局来说是不可见的,但可能导致严重的临床疾病,需要采取特定的控制干预措施。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f71e/4654493/220e93792624/pntd.0004222.g001.jpg

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