Department of Parasitology, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Epidemiol Infect. 2020 Feb 21;148:e47. doi: 10.1017/S0950268820000515.
The relative contribution of imported vs. locally acquired infections to urban malaria burden remains largely unexplored in Latin America, the most urbanised region in the developing world. Here we use a simple molecular epidemiology framework to examine the transmission dynamics of Plasmodium vivax in Mâncio Lima, the Amazonian municipality with the highest malaria incidence rate in Brazil. We prospectively genotyped 177 P. vivax infections diagnosed in urban residents between June 2014 and July 2015 and showed that local parasites are structured into several lineages of closely related microsatellite haplotypes, with the largest genetic cluster comprising 32% of all infections. These findings are very unlikely under the hypothesis of multiple independent imports of parasite strains from the rural surroundings. Instead, the presence of an endemic near-clonal parasite lineage circulating over 13 consecutive months is consistent with a local P. vivax transmission chain in the town, with major implications for malaria elimination efforts in this and similar urban environments across the Amazon.
在发展中国家城市化程度最高的拉丁美洲,输入性感染与本地感染对城市疟疾负担的相对贡献在很大程度上仍未得到探索。在这里,我们使用一种简单的分子流行病学框架来研究在亚马逊城市曼西尼奥利马(Mâncio Lima)间日疟原虫的传播动态,该城市是巴西疟疾发病率最高的城市。我们前瞻性地对 2014 年 6 月至 2015 年 7 月期间在城市居民中诊断出的 177 例间日疟原虫感染进行了基因分型,结果表明,当地寄生虫分为几个密切相关的微卫星单倍型谱系,最大的遗传簇占所有感染的 32%。在寄生虫株从农村地区多次独立输入的假设下,这些发现极不可能出现。相反,在 13 个连续月内循环存在地方性近克隆寄生虫谱系,这与该城镇间日疟原虫的本地传播链一致,这对该城镇和亚马逊地区类似城市环境中的疟疾消除工作具有重大意义。