Canelas Tiago, Castillo-Salgado Carlos, Ribeiro Helena
School of Public Health, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, US.
PLoS Curr. 2018 Mar 27;10:ecurrents.outbreaks.8f23fe5f0c2052bfaaa648e6931e4e1a. doi: 10.1371/currents.outbreaks.8f23fe5f0c2052bfaaa648e6931e4e1a.
Malaria still is a public health problem in the Americas. In 2015, Brazil accounted for 37% of all cases in the Americas, and of these cases, 99.5% were located in the Brazilian Amazon. Despite the mobilization of resources from the Brazilian National Plan for Malaria Control, too many municipalities have high transmission levels. The objective of this study is to evaluate the local epidemiological profile of malaria and its trend between 2010 and 2015 in the Brazilian Amazon. This study also aims to recognize the epidemiological differences in the local temporo-spatial dynamics of malaria.
Malaria data were stratified by the annual parasite incidence (API) over the six-year period and by municipality. We used the method of seasonal decomposition by Loess smoothing to capture trend, seasonal and irregular components. A generalized linear model was applied to quantify trends, and the Kruskal-Wallis Rank Sum was applied to test for seasonality significance.
The malaria API declined by 61% from 2010 to 2015, and there was a 40% reduction of municipalities with high transmission (determined as an API higher than 50). In 2015, 9.4% of municipalities had high transmission and included 62.8% of the total cases. The time-series analyses showed different incidence patterns by region after 2012; several states have minimized the effect of the seasonality in their incidence rates, thus achieving low rates of incidence. There were 13 municipalities with sustained high transmission that have become the principal focus of malaria control; these municipalities contained 40% of the cases between 2013 and 2015.
Brazil has achieved advances, but more sustained efforts are necessary to contain malaria resurgence. The use of malaria stratification has been demonstrated as a relevant tool to plan malaria programs more efficiently, and spatiotemporal analysis corroborates the idea that implementing any intervention in malaria should be stratified by time to interpret tendencies and by space to understand the local dynamics of the disease.
疟疾在美洲仍然是一个公共卫生问题。2015年,巴西占美洲所有疟疾病例的37%,其中99.5%位于巴西亚马逊地区。尽管巴西国家疟疾控制计划调动了资源,但仍有太多城市的疟疾传播水平很高。本研究的目的是评估2010年至2015年巴西亚马逊地区疟疾的当地流行病学概况及其趋势。本研究还旨在认识疟疾当地时空动态中的流行病学差异。
疟疾数据按六年期间的年度寄生虫发病率(API)和城市进行分层。我们使用局部加权回归散点平滑法(Loess平滑)进行季节性分解的方法来捕捉趋势、季节性和不规则成分。应用广义线性模型来量化趋势,并应用Kruskal-Wallis秩和检验来检验季节性的显著性。
从2010年到2015年,疟疾API下降了61%,高传播率城市(定义为API高于50)减少了40%。2015年,9.4%的城市传播率高,这些城市的病例占总病例的62.8%。时间序列分析显示,2012年后各地区发病率模式不同;几个州已将季节性对发病率的影响降至最低,从而实现了低发病率。有13个城市持续高传播,已成为疟疾控制的主要重点;2013年至2015年期间,这些城市的病例占40%。
巴西已取得进展,但需要做出更持续的努力来遏制疟疾卷土重来。疟疾分层的应用已被证明是更有效地规划疟疾防治计划的相关工具,时空分析证实了这样一种观点,即实施任何疟疾干预措施都应按时间分层以解释趋势,按空间分层以了解疾病的当地动态。