Abstract

The existence and the nature of protective immunity in human filariasis continues to be a subject of intense debate. While there is no broad consensus on functional immunity against larval and adult stage parasites, anti-microfilarial immunity has been demonstrated to be mediated by antibodies to the microfilarial sheath. In the present study, circulating filarial antigens (CFA), a marker of active filarial infection in human Bancroftian filariasis, was found to be inversely associated with antibodies to microfilarial sheath in a cohort of 411 subjects representing all categories of filariasis across the clinical spectrum of the disease. Approximately 80% of humans of all age groups (5-65 years) were found to have either CFA or anti-sheath antibodies. The inverse relationship observed between these two parameters was found to be independent of the clinical manifestation; both symptomatic and asymptomatic cases were found to display similar inverse association between CFA and anti-sheath antibodies. The prevalence of anti-sheath antibodies in the paediatric group was found to be very high as compared to adults; 78% of children below the age of 10 years tested positive for anti-sheath antibodies although the mf rate and CFA rate were only 4.5% and 22.7%, respectively, in this age group, indicating that developing larvae or juvenile adult stage parasites could have been the source of antigenic stimulus for induction of antibodies to the microfilarial sheath.

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