EPPIcenter program, Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, United States.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, United States.
Elife. 2019 Apr 2;8:e43510. doi: 10.7554/eLife.43510.
Local and cross-border importation remain major challenges to malaria elimination and are difficult to measure using traditional surveillance data. To address this challenge, we systematically collected parasite genetic data and travel history from thousands of malaria cases across northeastern Namibia and estimated human mobility from mobile phone data. We observed strong fine-scale spatial structure in local parasite populations, providing positive evidence that the majority of cases were due to local transmission. This result was largely consistent with estimates from mobile phone and travel history data. However, genetic data identified more detailed and extensive evidence of parasite connectivity over hundreds of kilometers than the other data, within Namibia and across the Angolan and Zambian borders. Our results provide a framework for incorporating genetic data into malaria surveillance and provide evidence that both strengthening of local interventions and regional coordination are likely necessary to eliminate malaria in this region of Southern Africa.
局部和跨境输入仍然是消除疟疾的主要挑战,使用传统监测数据很难衡量。为了解决这一挑战,我们系统地收集了纳米比亚东北部数千例疟疾病例的寄生虫遗传数据和旅行史,并利用移动电话数据估计了人类的流动性。我们观察到局部寄生虫种群具有很强的精细空间结构,这提供了有力的证据表明,大多数病例是由当地传播引起的。这一结果与移动电话和旅行史数据的估计基本一致。然而,遗传数据比其他数据更详细、更广泛地证实了数百公里范围内寄生虫的连通性,不仅在纳米比亚境内,而且还跨越了安哥拉和赞比亚边境。我们的研究结果为将遗传数据纳入疟疾监测提供了框架,并提供了证据表明,加强当地干预和区域协调可能是该南部非洲地区消除疟疾所必需的。