Abstract

BackgroundOngoing efforts to fight Plasmodium falciparum malaria has reduced malaria in many areas, but new tools are needed to monitor further progress, including indicators of decreasing exposure to parasite infection. Sero-surveillance is considered promising to monitor exposure, transmission and immunity.MethodsIgG responses to three antigen biomarkers were evaluated in a retrospective study involving: (i) surveys of 798 asymptomatic villagers from 2 Senegalese endemic settings conducted before 2002 and after the 2013 intensification of control measures, and (ii) in 105 symptomatic individuals from different settings in Côte d’Ivoire. Response to up to eight P. falciparum antigens, including recombinant MSP1p9 antigen and LSA141 peptide, were analysed using multiplex technology and responses to whole P. falciparum schizont extract (SE, local strain adapted to culture) were measured by ELISA.ResultsMSP1p9 and LSA141 IgG responses were shown to be relevant indicators monitoring immune status in the different study sites both from Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal. Between 2002 and 2013, individuals participating in both studies showed higher decline of sero-positivity in young (< 15 years: range 12% to 50%) than older (> 15 years: no decline to 15%) individuals from Dielmo and Ndiop. A mathematical sero-catalytic model from the complete Dielmo/Ndiop survey was used to reconstruct declining levels of sero-positivity in more detail, demonstrating that anti-SE seroprevalence levels most accurately reflected malaria exposure in the two villages.ConclusionFor standard screening of population immune status at sites envisaging elimination, the use of ELISA-based assays targeting selected antigens can contribute to provide important epidemiologic surveillance data to aid malaria control programmes.

Highlights

  • Ongoing efforts to fight Plasmodium falciparum malaria has reduced malaria in many areas, but new tools are needed to monitor further progress, including indicators of decreasing exposure to parasite infection

  • Full list of author information is available at the end of the article

  • Study area and recruitment The Côte d’Ivoire study involved 163 individuals (Table 1). This included 93 patients consulting for symptomatic fever in three health centres: Korhogo, located in a savannah area with a sudanian climate, the village of Man in the Western forest and mountain area, and Abobo located in the southern part of the township of Abidjan characterized by the presence of a lagoon

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Summary

Introduction

Ongoing efforts to fight Plasmodium falciparum malaria has reduced malaria in many areas, but new tools are needed to monitor further progress, including indicators of decreasing exposure to parasite infection. In Senegal, longitudinal analyses of data from the villages of Dielmo and Ndiop showed that after a sharp decline in malaria cases during the 2 years following the use of ACT and LLINs, a rebound in the number of malaria cases occurred [4, 5] Such rebounds affect all age groups and young children who are usually the most susceptible, indicating that the sharp decrease of exposure resulted in a clinically observable population wide decreases in natural protective immunity [4, 6]. These observations underline the need for increased surveillance to monitor these rapid epidemiological changes

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