Abstract

BackgroundAsymptomatic individuals are one of the major challenges for malaria elimination programs in endemic areas. In the absence of clinical symptoms and with a lower parasite density they constitute silent reservoirs considered important for maintaining transmission of human malaria. Studies from Brazil have shown that infected individuals may carry these parasites for long periods.ResultsPatients were selected from three periurban endemic areas of the city of Manaus, in the western Brazilian Amazon. Symptomatic and asymptomatic patients with positive thick blood smear and quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) positive for Plasmodium vivax were invited to participate in the study. A standardised pvs25 gene amplification by qPCR was used for P. vivax gametocytes detection. Anopheles aquasalis were fed using membrane feeding assays (MFA) containing blood from malaria patients. Parasitemia of 42 symptomatic and 25 asymptomatic individuals was determined by microscopic examination of blood smears and qPCR. Parasitemia density and gametocyte density were assessed as determinants of infection rates and oocysts densities. A strong correlation between gametocyte densities (microscopy and molecular techniques) and mosquito infectivity (P < 0.001) and oocysts median numbers (P < 0.05) was found in both groups. The ability to infect mosquitoes was higher in the symptomatic group (41%), but infectivity in the asymptomatic group was also seen (1.42%).ConclusionsAlthough their infectivity to mosquitoes is relatively low, given the high prevalence of P. vivax asymptomatic carriers they are likely to play and important role in malaria transmission in the city of Manaus. The role of asymptomatic infections therefore needs to be considered in future malaria elimination programs in Brazil.

Highlights

  • Asymptomatic individuals are one of the major challenges for malaria elimination programs in endemic areas

  • Gametocytemia has a key role in malaria transmission, specific factors associated with the presence, spatial and temporal patterns, and infectivity of these sexual forms to mosquitoes are not well understood

  • The mean parasitemia determined by light microscopy was 2454 parasites/μl for asexual stages and 152 parasites/μl for gametocytes, with the proportion of 83% (35/42)

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Summary

Introduction

Asymptomatic individuals are one of the major challenges for malaria elimination programs in endemic areas. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 214 million cases of malaria and 438,000 deaths were recorded in 2015 [1]. In Brazil, from January to November 2016, 114,287 malaria cases were recorded [2]. The naturally acquired immunity against sexual forms of P. vivax in endemic regions remains unclear, as well as its interference with mosquitoes infectivity or “transmission-blocking effect” [5,6,7]. Transmission-blocking by antibodies against Plasmodium sexual forms has been increasingly becoming an important anti-malaria candidate strategy [8, 9]. Gametocytemia has a key role in malaria transmission, specific factors associated with the presence, spatial and temporal patterns, and infectivity of these sexual forms to mosquitoes are not well understood. Molecular markers of gametocyte stages include pfs25/pvs, which have been used successfully to detect gametocytes [10,11,12,13]

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