Abstract

BackgroundThe European region achieved interruption of malaria transmission during the 1970s. Since then, malaria control programs were replaced by surveillance systems in order to prevent possible re-emergence of this disease. Sporadic cases of non-imported malaria were recorded in several European countries in the past decade and locally transmitted outbreaks of Plasmodium vivax, most probably supported by Anopheles sacharovi, have been repeatedly reported from Greece since 2009. The possibility of locally-transmitted malaria has been extensively studied in Italy where the former malaria vector An. labranchiae survived the control campaign which led to malaria elimination. In this study, we present paradigmatic cases that occurred during a 2017 unusual cluster, which caused strong concern in public opinion and were carefully investigated after the implementation of the updated malaria surveillance system.MethodsFor suspected locally-transmitted malaria cases, alerts to Ministry of Health (MoH) and the National Institute of Health (ISS) were mandated by the Local Health Services (LHS). Epidemiological investigations on the transmission modes and the identification of possible infection’s source were carried out by LHS, MoH and ISS. Entomological investigations were implemented locally for all suspected locally-transmitted cases that occurred in periods suitable to anopheline activity. Molecular diagnosis by nested-PCR for the five human Plasmodium species was performed to support microscopic diagnosis. In addition, genotyping of P. falciparum isolate was carried out to investigate putative sources of infection and transmission modalities.ResultsIn 2017, a cluster of seven non-imported cases was recorded from August through October. Among them, P. ovale curtisi was responsible of one case whereas six cases were caused by P. falciparum. Two cases were proved to be nosocomial while the other five were recorded as cryptic at the end of epidemiological investigations.ConclusionsThe epidemiological evidence shows that the locally acquired events are sporadic, often remain unresolved and classified as cryptic ones despite investigative efforts. The “cluster” of seven non-imported cases that occurred in 2017 in different regions of Italy therefore represents a conscious alert that should lead us to maintain a constant level of surveillance in a former malaria endemic country.

Highlights

  • The European region achieved interruption of malaria transmission during the 1970s

  • We present paradigmatic non-imported cases that occurred during a 2017 cluster, which caused strong concern in public opinion and were carefully investigated after the implementation of the updated malaria surveillance system

  • 11 cases were classified as induced [40, 41]; 7 were considered cryptic; 2 were strongly suspected to be introduced [21]. The latter cases consisted of P. vivax-infected individuals who resided in formerly malaria-endemic territories of Latium (August 2009) and Calabria regions (September 2011), respectively

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Summary

Introduction

The European region achieved interruption of malaria transmission during the 1970s. Since malaria control programs were replaced by surveillance systems in order to prevent possible re-emergence of this disease. Sporadic cases of non-imported malaria were recorded in several European countries in the past decade and locally transmitted outbreaks of Plasmodium vivax, most probably supported by Anopheles sacharovi, have been repeatedly reported from Greece since 2009. Sporadic cases of non-imported malaria were recorded in several European countries such as Germany, France, Spain and Malta [7,8,9,10,11,12], and locally transmitted outbreaks of Plasmodium vivax, most probably supported by Anopheles sacharovi, have been repeatedly reported from Greece since 2009 [5, 13,14,15]. Populations of An. labranchiae have strongly been suspected to be responsible for autochthonous P. vivax transmission after malaria elimination [20, 21], whereas it appears that this species has a low susceptibility to the afro-tropical Plasmodium falciparum according to experimental and epidemiological evidence [17, 22, 23]

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