Abstract

After decades of research, our understanding of when and why individuals infected with Plasmodium falciparumdevelop clinical malaria is still limited. Correlates of immune protection are often sought through prospective cohort studies, where measured host factors are correlated against the incidence of clinical disease over a set period of time. However, robustly inferring individual-level protection from these population-level findings has proved difficult due to small effect sizes and high levels of variance underlying such data. In order to better understand the nature of these inter-individual variations, we analysed the long-term malaria epidemiology of children ≤12 years old growing up under seasonal exposure to the parasite in the sub-location of Junju, Kenya. Despite the cohort's limited geographic expanse (ca. 3km x 10km), our data reveal a high degree of spatial and temporal variability in malaria prevalence and incidence rates, causing individuals to experience varying levels of exposure to the parasite at different times during their life. Analysing individual-level infection histories further reveal an unexpectedly high variability in the rate at which children experience clinical malaria episodes. Besides exposure to the parasite, measured as disease prevalence in the surrounding area, we find that the birth time of year has an independent effect on the individual's risk of experiencing a clinical episode. Furthermore, our analyses reveal that those children with a history of an above average number of episodes are more likely to experience further episodes during the upcoming transmission season. These findings are indicative of phenotypic differences in the rates by which children acquire clinical protection to malaria and offer important insights into the natural variability underlying malaria epidemiology.

Highlights

  • Individuals growing up in P. falciparum malaria endemic areas acquire a general state of immunity against clinical malaria through repeated exposure to the parasite

  • Blood samples were taken from febrile children and P. falciparum (Pf) infection initially detected by rapid diagnostic test (RDT) and confirmed by microscopy

  • In contrast to the similarity in the age distribution between individuals who experience a clinical episode or not (Figure 4A), accounting for inter-individual level variation we find that older children have a slightly reduced risk of experiencing an episode compared to younger ones (-0.15, 95% credible intervals (CI) [-0.24, -0.07])

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Summary

Introduction

Individuals growing up in P. falciparum malaria endemic areas acquire a general state of immunity against clinical malaria through repeated exposure to the parasite. This process of naturally acquired protection is still poorly understood[1] but believed to involve the build-up of a repertoire of immune responses against the myriad of antigenic targets that the parasite displays over its lifecycle during in vivo infections[2,3,4]. Research into the complexity of clinical protection often relies on cohort studies, where antigen-specific immune responses are correlated against the incidence of disease. The latter is problematic because in many cases we do not know whether someone got infected during the study period or not

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