Laboratorio de Malaria: Parásitos y Vectores, Laboratorios de Investigación y Desarrollo, Facultad de Ciencias y Filosofía, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
Research Institute of Health and Society (IRSS), Université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2024 Oct 31;18(10):e0012566. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0012566. eCollection 2024 Oct.
In the Peruvian Amazon, Plasmodium vivax malaria transmission is maintained due to the high frequency of recurrences. By understanding the recurrence rates of submicroscopic and asymptomatic cases, we can develop informed strategies to prevent transmission more efficiently and disrupt the silent transmission cycle.
A three-year, population-based cohort study was conducted in two sites, Cahuide and Lupuna, within the Loreto region in Peru from 2013 to 2015. The study included 385 individuals and aimed to examine the temporal dynamics of malaria recurrences and their impact on transmission and control.
Individuals from Lupuna presented a higher risk of P. vivax infections compared to Cahuide, where most recurrences were asymptomatic and submicroscopic. It is estimated that a great proportion of these recurrences were due to relapses in both communities. The application of molecular diagnostic method proved to be significantly more effective, detecting 2.3 times more episodes during the follow-up (PCR, 1068; microscopy, 467). PCR identified recurrences significantly earlier, at 151 days after an initial infection, compared to microscopy, which detected them on average after 365 days. Community, occupation and previous malaria infections were factors associated with recurrences. Finally, potential infection evolution scenarios were described where one frequent scenario involved the transition from symptomatic to asymptomatic infections with a mean evolution time of 240 days.
This study explores the contrast in malaria recurrence risk among individuals from two endemic settings, a consequence of prolonged exposure to the parasite. Through the analysis of the evolution scenarios of P. vivax recurrences, it is possible to have a more complete vision of how the transmission pattern changes over time and is conditioned by different factors.
在秘鲁亚马逊地区,由于复发频率高,间日疟原虫疟疾的传播得以维持。通过了解亚临床和无症状病例的复发率,我们可以制定更明智的策略来更有效地预防传播并打破沉默的传播周期。
本研究于 2013 年至 2015 年在秘鲁洛雷托地区的两个地点卡惠德和卢普纳进行了一项为期三年的基于人群的队列研究。该研究包括 385 名个体,旨在研究疟疾复发的时间动态及其对传播和控制的影响。
与卡惠德相比,卢普纳的个体感染间日疟原虫的风险更高,而卡惠德的大多数复发为无症状和亚临床。据估计,这些复发中有很大一部分是由于两个社区的复发。分子诊断方法的应用被证明更为有效,在随访期间检测到的病例增加了 2.3 倍(PCR,1068;显微镜,467)。PCR 比显微镜更早地发现复发,在初次感染后 151 天,而显微镜平均在 365 天后检测到复发。社区、职业和既往疟疾感染是与复发相关的因素。最后,描述了潜在的感染演变情景,其中一个常见情景是从有症状感染向无症状感染的转变,平均演变时间为 240 天。
本研究探讨了来自两个流行地区的个体之间疟疾复发风险的差异,这是由于个体长期接触寄生虫所致。通过分析间日疟原虫复发的演变情景,可以更全面地了解传播模式随时间的变化以及不同因素的影响。