Neutrophil activation, acute lung injury and disease severity in Plasmodium knowlesi malaria

Author:

Tan Angelica F.ORCID,Sakam Sitti Saimah binti,Piera Kim,Rajahram Giri S.,William Timothy,Barber Bridget E.,Anstey Nicholas M.,Grigg Matthew J.,Kho Steven

Abstract

The risk of severe malaria from the zoonotic parasite Plasmodium knowlesi approximates that from P. falciparum. In severe falciparum malaria, neutrophil activation contributes to inflammatory pathogenesis, including acute lung injury (ALI). The role of neutrophil activation in the pathogenesis of severe knowlesi malaria has not been examined. We evaluated 213 patients with P. knowlesi mono-infection (138 non-severe, 75 severe) and 49 Plasmodium-negative controls from Malaysia. Markers of neutrophil activation (soluble neutrophil elastase [NE], citrullinated histone [CitH3] and circulating neutrophil extracellular traps [NETs]) were quantified in peripheral blood by microscopy and immunoassays. Findings were correlated with malaria severity, ALI clinical criteria, biomarkers of parasite biomass, haemolysis, and endothelial activation. Neutrophil activation increased with disease severity, with median levels higher in severe than non-severe malaria and controls for NE (380[IQR:210–930]ng/mL, 236[139–448]ng/mL, 218[134–307]ng/mL, respectively) and CitH3 (8.72[IQR:3.0–23.1]ng/mL, 4.29[1.46–9.49]ng/mL, 1.53[0.6–2.59]ng/mL, respectively)[all p<0.01]. NETs were higher in severe malaria compared to controls (126/μL[IQR:49–323] vs 51[20–75]/μL, p<0.001). In non-severe malaria, neutrophil activation fell significantly upon discharge from hospital (p<0.03). In severe disease, NETs, NE, and CitH3 were correlated with parasitaemia, cell-free haemoglobin and angiopoietin-2 (all Pearson’s r>0.24, p<0.05). Plasma NE and angiopoietin-2 were higher in knowlesi patients with ALI than those without (p<0.008); neutrophilia was associated with an increased risk of ALI (aOR 3.27, p<0.01). In conclusion, neutrophil activation is increased in ALI and in proportion to disease severity in knowlesi malaria, is associated with endothelial activation, and may contribute to disease pathogenesis. Trials of adjunctive therapies to regulate neutrophil activation are warranted in severe knowlesi malaria.

Funder

Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research

National Health and Medical Research Council

National health and medical research council

NIH

Kementerian Kesihatan Malaysia

Malaysia Australia Colombo Plan Commemoration (MACC) and Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship at Charles Darwin University

Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, and Indo-Pacific Centre for Health Security, DFAT, Australian Government

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Reference56 articles.

1. Malaria;JR Poespoprodjo;The Lancet,2023

2. Updating estimates of Plasmodium knowlesi malaria risk in response to changing land use patterns across Southeast Asia;RJ Tobin;PLoS neglected tropical diseases,2024

3. World Health Organization. World malaria report 2022: World Health Organization; 2022.

4. Age-Related Clinical Spectrum of Plasmodium knowlesi Malaria and Predictors of Severity;MJ Grigg;Clin Infect Dis,2018

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