Micro-heterogeneity of transmission shapes the submicroscopic malaria reservoir in coastal Tanzania

Author:

Rapp TylerORCID,Amagai Kano,Sinai Cyrus,Basham Christopher,Loya Mwajabu,Ngasala Sifa,Said Hamza,Muller Meredith S.,Chhetri Srijana B.,Yang Guozheng,François Ruthly,Odas Melic,Mathias Derrick,Juliano Jonathan J.,Lin Feng-Chang,Ngasala Billy,Lin Jessica T.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAsymptomatic malaria may be patent (visible by microscopy) and detectable by rapid malaria diagnostic tests (RDTs), or it may be submicroscopic and only detectable by polymerase chain reaction (PCR).MethodsTo characterize the submicroscopic reservoir in an area of declining malaria transmission, asymptomatic persons >5 years of age in Bagamoyo District, Tanzania, were screened using RDT, microscopy, and PCR. We investigated the size of the submicroscopic reservoir across villages, determined factors associated with submicroscopic parasitemia, and assessed the natural history of submicroscopic malaria over four weeks.ResultsAmong 6,076 participants,Plasmodium falciparumprevalence by RDT, microscopy, and PCR was 9%, 9%, and 28%, respectively, with roughly two-thirds of PCR-positive individuals harboring submicroscopic infection. Adult status, female gender, dry season months, screened windows, and bednet use were associated with submicroscopic carriage. Among 15 villages encompassing 80% of participants, the proportion of submicroscopic carriers increased with decreasing village-level malaria prevalence. Over four weeks, 23% (61/266) of submicroscopic carriers became RDT-positive and were treated, with half exhibiting symptoms. This occurred more frequently in villages with higher malaria prevalence.ConclusionsMicro-heterogeneity in transmission impacts the size of the submicroscopic reservoir and the likelihood of submicroscopic carriers developing patent malaria in coastal Tanzania.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference46 articles.

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