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Citation

Sumner, Kelsey M.; Freedman, Elizabeth; Mangeni, Judith N.; Obala, Andrew; Abel, Lucy; Edwards, Jessie K.; Emch, Michael E.; Meshnick, Steven R.; Pence, Brian W.; & Prudhomme-O'Meara, Wendy, et al. (2021). Exposure to Diverse Plasmodium Falciparum Genotypes Shapes the Risk of Symptomatic Malaria in Incident and Persistent Infections: A Longitudinal Molecular Epidemiologic Study in Kenya. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 73(7), 1176-1184. PMCID: PMC8492207

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Repeated exposure to malaria infections could protect against symptomatic progression as people develop adaptive immunity to infections acquired over time.
METHODS: We investigated how new, recurrent, and persistent Plasmodium falciparum infections were associated with the odds of developing symptomatic compared with asymptomatic malaria. Using a 14-month longitudinal cohort in Western Kenya, we used amplicon deep sequencing of 2 polymorphic genes (pfama1 and pfcsp) to assess overlap of parasite genotypes (represented by haplotypes) acquired within an individual's successive infections. We hypothesized infections with novel haplotypes would increase the odds of symptomatic malaria.
RESULTS: After excluding initial infections, we observed 534 asymptomatic and 88 symptomatic infections across 186 people. We detected 109 pfcsp haplotypes, and each infection was classified as harboring novel, recurrent, or persistent haplotypes. Incident infections with only new haplotypes had higher odds of symptomatic malaria when compared with infections with only recurrent haplotypes [odds ratio (OR): 3.24; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.20-8.78], but infections with both new and recurrent haplotypes (OR: 0.64; 95% CI: 0.15-2.65) did not. Assessing persistent infections, those with mixed (persistent with new or recurrent) haplotypes (OR: 0.77; 95% CI: 0.21-2.75) had no association with symptomatic malaria compared with infections with only persistent haplotypes. Results were similar for pfama1.
CONCLUSIONS: These results confirm that incident infections with only novel haplotypes were associated with increased odds of symptomatic malaria compared with infections with only recurrent haplotypes but this relationship was not seen when haplotypes persisted over time in consecutive infections.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciab357

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2021

Journal Title

Clinical Infectious Diseases

Author(s)

Sumner, Kelsey M.
Freedman, Elizabeth
Mangeni, Judith N.
Obala, Andrew
Abel, Lucy
Edwards, Jessie K.
Emch, Michael E.
Meshnick, Steven R.
Pence, Brian W.
Prudhomme-O'Meara, Wendy
Taylor, Steve M

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC8492207

Continent/Country

Kenya

ORCiD

Emch - 0000-0003-2642-965X
Edwards, J -0000-0002-1741-335X