Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Biomedical Science Program, Center for Toxicology and Health Risk Studies, Faculty of Health Sciences, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Acta Trop. 2024 Sep;257:107280. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2024.107280. Epub 2024 Jun 20.
Malaria continues to be a global public health problem although it has been eliminated from many countries. Sri Lanka and China are two countries that recently achieved malaria elimination status, and many countries in Southeast Asia are currently in the pipeline for achieving the same goal by 2030. However, Plasmodium knowlesi, a non-human primate malaria parasite continues to pose a threat to public health in this region, infecting many humans in all countries in Southeast Asia except for Timor-Leste. Besides, other non-human primate malaria parasite such as Plasmodium cynomolgi and Plasmodium inui are infecting humans in the region. The non-human primates, the long-tailed and pig-tailed macaques which harbour these parasites are now increasingly prevalent in farms and forest fringes close by to the villages. Additionally, the Anopheles mosquitoes belonging to the Lecuosphyrus Group are also present in these areas which makes them ideal for transmitting the non-human primate malaria parasites. With changing landscape and deforestation, non-human primate malaria parasites will affect more humans in the coming years with the elimination of human malaria. Perhaps due to loss of immunity, more humans will be infected as currently being demonstrated in Malaysia. Thus, control measures need to be instituted rapidly to achieve the malaria elimination status by 2030. However, the zoonotic origin of the parasite and the changes of the vectors behaviour to early biting seems to be the stumbling block to the malaria elimination efforts in this region. In this review, we discuss the challenges faced in malaria elimination due to deforestation and the serious threat posed by non-human primate malaria parasites.
疟疾虽然已在许多国家被消灭,但仍是一个全球性的公共卫生问题。斯里兰卡和中国是最近达到消除疟疾状态的两个国家,东南亚的许多国家目前也在努力争取在 2030 年实现同样的目标。然而,非人类灵长类动物疟原虫——知氏疟原虫仍然对该地区的公共卫生构成威胁,感染了东南亚所有国家除东帝汶以外的许多人。此外,该地区还有其他非人类灵长类动物疟原虫,如食蟹猴疟原虫和猕猴疟原虫感染人类。这些寄生虫的宿主长尾猴和猪尾猕猴等非人类灵长类动物现在在农场和附近的森林边缘越来越普遍。此外,属于 Lecuosphyrus 组的按蚊也存在于这些地区,这使它们成为传播非人类灵长类动物疟原虫的理想媒介。随着景观的变化和森林砍伐,在人类疟疾消除后,未来几年非人类灵长类动物疟原虫将感染更多的人类。也许由于免疫力的丧失,正如目前在马来西亚所显示的那样,将会有更多的人类被感染。因此,需要迅速采取控制措施,以实现到 2030 年消除疟疾的目标。然而,寄生虫的动物源以及媒介行为向早期叮咬的变化似乎是该地区消除疟疾工作的绊脚石。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了由于森林砍伐而在消除疟疾方面面临的挑战,以及非人类灵长类动物疟原虫带来的严重威胁。