Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, United States.
Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Kampala, Uganda.
Elife. 2020 Oct 27;9:e59872. doi: 10.7554/eLife.59872.
Multiple studies have reported a male bias in incidence and/or prevalence of malaria infection in males compared to females. To test the hypothesis that sex-based differences in host-parasite interactions affect the epidemiology of malaria, we intensively followed infections in a cohort in a malaria endemic area of eastern Uganda and estimated both force of infection (FOI) and rate of clearance using amplicon deep-sequencing. We found no evidence of differences in behavioral risk factors, incidence of malaria, or FOI by sex. In contrast, females cleared asymptomatic infections at a faster rate than males (hazard ratio [HR]=1.82, 95% CI 1.20 to 2.75 by clone and HR = 2.07, 95% CI 1.24 to 3.47 by infection event) in multivariate models adjusted for age, timing of infection onset, and parasite density. These findings implicate biological sex-based differences as an important factor in the host response to this globally important pathogen.
多项研究报告称,与女性相比,男性疟疾感染的发病率和/或患病率存在男性偏倚。为了检验宿主-寄生虫相互作用的性别差异是否影响疟疾流行病学的假设,我们在乌干达东部疟疾流行地区的一个队列中对感染进行了密集跟踪,并使用扩增子深度测序估计了感染力(FOI)和清除率。我们没有发现性行为风险因素、疟疾发病率或 FOI 存在性别差异的证据。相比之下,女性清除无症状感染的速度快于男性(按克隆计算的风险比 [HR]=1.82,95%CI 为 1.20 至 2.75;按感染事件计算的 HR = 2.07,95%CI 为 1.24 至 3.47),这在调整年龄、感染发病时间和寄生虫密度的多变量模型中是如此。这些发现表明,生物学性别差异是宿主对这种全球重要病原体反应的一个重要因素。