Abstract

People living in endemic areas often habour several malaria infections at once. High-resolution genotyping can distinguish between infections by detecting the presence of different alleles at a polymorphic locus. However the number of infections may not be accurately counted since parasites from multiple infections may carry the same allele. We use simulation to determine the circumstances under which the number of observed genotypes are likely to be substantially less than the number of infections present and investigate the performance of two methods for estimating the numbers of infections from high-resolution genotyping data.The simulations suggest that the problem is not substantial in most datasets: the disparity between the mean numbers of infections and of observed genotypes was small when there was 20 or more alleles, 20 or more blood samples, a mean number of infections of 6 or less and where the frequency of the most common allele was no greater than 20%. The issue of multiple infections carrying the same allele is unlikely to be a major component of the errors in PCR-based genotyping.Simulations also showed that, with heterogeneity in allele frequencies, the observed frequencies are not a good approximation of the true allele frequencies. The first method that we proposed to estimate the numbers of infections assumes that they are a good approximation and hence did poorly in the presence of heterogeneity. In contrast, the second method by Li et al estimates both the numbers of infections and the true allele frequencies simultaneously and produced accurate estimates of the mean number of infections.

Highlights

  • People who live in malaria-endemic areas may have several concurrent infections

  • Discriminating between these both yields the multiplicity of infection (MOI), an epidemiological measure of the number of infections per individual, and can improve the understanding of many areas of malariology, such as the dynamics of infections, pathogenesis, effect of transmission intensity, drug efficacy and parasite genetics

  • The disparity was small where there were 20 or more alleles, 20 or more blood samples, a mean MOI of 6 or less and where the frequency of the most common allele was no greater than 20%

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Summary

Introduction

People who live in malaria-endemic areas may have several concurrent infections. Accurately discriminating between these both yields the multiplicity of infection (MOI), an epidemiological measure of the number of infections per individual, and can improve the understanding of many areas of malariology, such as the dynamics of infections, pathogenesis, effect of transmission intensity, drug efficacy and parasite genetics.Plasmodium populations are highly diverse. People who live in malaria-endemic areas may have several concurrent infections. Discriminating between these both yields the multiplicity of infection (MOI), an epidemiological measure of the number of infections per individual, and can improve the understanding of many areas of malariology, such as the dynamics of infections, pathogenesis, effect of transmission intensity, drug efficacy and parasite genetics. Whilst PCR can detect the alleles of parasites present in a blood sample, it does not always give an accurate count of the infections present since parasites from multiple infections may bear the same allele or alleles close in size. Since the true number of infections is unknown, the accuracy of high-resolution techniques cannot be determined. (ii) What is the distribution of the number of infections in the population from which the sample was drawn? Two questions arise: (i) Is there substantial underestimation of the multiplicity in the blood samples due to multiple indistinguishable genotypes? (ii) What is the distribution of the number of infections in the population from which the sample was drawn?

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