A cross-sectional study of imported malaria infections in Zanzibar

Author:

Fakih Bakar S.1ORCID,Holzschuh Aurel2,Ross Amanda1,Stuck Logan3,Abdul Ramadhan4,Al-Mafazy Abdul-Wahid H.5,Irema Imani4,Mbena Abdallah4,Thawer Sumaiyya G.1,Shija Shija J.5,Aliy Safia M.5,Ali Abdullah5,Fink Günther1,Yukich Joshua3,Hetzel Manuel W.1

Affiliation:

1. Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute: Schweizerisches Tropen- und Public Health-Institut

2. University of Notre Dame Department of Biological Sciences

3. Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine

4. Ifakara Health Institute

5. Zanzibar Malaria Elimination Programme

Abstract

Abstract Background Zanzibar has made substantial progress in malaria control with the scaling-up of vector control, improved diagnosis, and artemisinin-based combination therapy. Parasite prevalence in the population has remained around 1% but imported infections from mainland Tanzania contribute to sustained local transmission. Understanding travel patterns between mainland Tanzania and Zanzibar and the risk of malaria infection may help to control the importation of infections to Zanzibar.Methods A rolling cross-sectional survey linked to routine reactive case detection of malaria was carried out in Zanzibar between May 2017 and October 2018. Households of patients diagnosed with malaria at health facilities (‘index cases’) were surveyed and household members were tested for malaria using rapid diagnostic tests and a sub-sample by quantitative PCR (qPCR). Interviews elicited a detailed travel history of all household members who had travelled within the past two months, including trips within and outside of Zanzibar. We estimated the association of malaria infection with travel destinations in pre-defined malaria endemicity categories, trip duration, and other co-variates.Results Of 17,891 survey participants, 1,177 (7%) reported a recent trip, of which 769 (65%) visited mainland Tanzania. Among travellers to mainland Tanzania with travel destination details and a qPCR result available, 64% (241/378) reported traveling to districts with a ‘high’ malaria endemicity and for 12% the highest endemicity category was ‘moderate’. Travelers to the mainland were more likely to be infected with malaria parasites (29%, 108/378) than those traveling within Zanzibar (8%, 16/206) or to other countries (6%, 2/17). Among travellers to mainland Tanzania, those visiting highly endemic districts had a higher odds of being qPCR-positive than those who travelled only to districts where malaria-endemicity was classified as low or very low (aOR = 7.0, 95% CI 1.9–25.5). Among travellers to the mainland, 110/378 (29%) never or only sometimes used a mosquito net during their travel.Conclusions Measures to reduce malaria importation to Zanzibar may benefit from identifying population groups traveling to highly endemic areas in mainland Tanzania. Targeted interventions to prevent and clear infections in these groups may be more feasible than screening and treating of all travellers at the port of entry.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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