Changing Clinical Epidemiology of Plasmodium vivax Malaria as Transmission Decreases: Population-Based Prospective Panel Survey in the Brazilian Amazon

Author:

Fontoura Pablo S12,Macedo Evelyn G1,Calil Priscila R1,Corder Rodrigo M13,Rodrigues Priscila T1,Tonini Juliana1,Esquivel Fabiana D1,Ladeia Winni A1,Fernandes Anderson R J1,Johansen Igor C1,Silva Marcos F1,Fernandes Amanda O S1,Ladeia-Andrade Simone4,Castro Marcia C5,Ferreira Marcelo U16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Parasitology, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, University of São Paulo

2. Secretary of Health Surveillance, Ministry of Health , Brasília , Brazil

3. Divisions of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Berkeley School of Public Health, University of California

4. Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation , Rio de Janeiro , Brazil

5. Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health , Boston, Massachusetts

6. Global Health and Tropical Medicine, Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Nova University of Lisbon , Portugal

Abstract

Abstract Background Malarial infections are often missed by microscopy, and most parasite carriers are asymptomatic in low-endemicity settings. Whether parasite detectability and its ability to elicit symptoms change as transmission declines remains unclear. Methods We performed a prospective panel survey with repeated measurements on the same participants over 12 months to investigate whether Plasmodium vivax detectability by microscopy and risk of symptoms upon infection varied during a community-wide larviciding intervention in the Amazon basin of Brazil that markedly reduced vector density. We screened 1096 to 1400 residents in the intervention site for malaria by microscopy and quantitative TaqMan assays at baseline and twice during intervention. Results We found that more P vivax infections than expected from their parasite densities measured by TaqMan assays were missed by microscopy as transmission decreased. At lower transmission, study participants appeared to tolerate higher P vivax loads without developing symptoms. We hypothesize that changes in the ratio between circulating parasites and those that accumulate in the bone marrow and spleen, by avoiding peripheral blood microscopy detection, account for decreased parasite detectability and lower risk of symptoms under low transmission. Conclusions P vivax infections are more likely to be subpatent and remain asymptomatic as malaria transmission decreases.

Funder

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies

Harvard University

National Institutes of Health

Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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