Abstract

BackgroundBlood group O protects African children against severe malaria and has reached high prevalence in malarious regions. However, its role in malaria in pregnancy is ambiguous. In 839 delivering Ghanaian women, associations of ABO blood groups with Plasmodium falciparum infection were examined.MethodsPlasmodium falciparum infection was diagnosed in placental blood samples by microscopy and PCR assays. Present or past infection was defined as the detection of parasitaemia or haemozoin by microscopy, or a positive PCR result. Blood groups were inferred from genotyping rs8176719 (indicating the O allele) and rs8176746/rs8176747 (distinguishing the B allele from the A allele).ResultsThe majority of women had blood group O (55.4%); present or past P. falciparum infection was seen in 62.3% of all women. Among multiparae, the blood groups had no influence on P. falciparum infection. In contrast, primiparae with blood group O had significantly less present or past infection than women with non-O blood groups (61.5 vs 76.2%, P = 0.007). In multivariate analysis, the odds of present or past placental P. falciparum infection were reduced by 45% in blood group O primiparae (aOR, 0.55 [95% CI, 0.33–0.94]).ConclusionsThe present study shows a clear protective effect of blood group O against malaria in primiparae. This accords with findings in severe malaria and in vitro results. The data underline the relevance of host genetic protection among primiparae, i.e. the high-risk group for malaria in pregnancy, and contribute to the understanding of high O allele frequencies in Africa.

Highlights

  • Blood group O protects African children against severe malaria and has reached high prevalence in malarious regions

  • Blood group O is common in malarious regions, e.g. sub-Saharan Africa [3,4], and confers protection against potentially fatal severe malaria across African populations [5,6,7,8]

  • A Gabonese study reported a trend towards less placental malaria in blood group O women [16], and in a recent prospective study from Thailand, no association at all between ABO blood groups and malaria during pregnancy was observed [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Blood group O protects African children against severe malaria and has reached high prevalence in malarious regions. A Gabonese study reported a trend towards less placental malaria in blood group O women [16], and in a recent prospective study from Thailand, no association at all between ABO blood groups and malaria during pregnancy was observed [17]. Against this background of conflicting results, the present study aimed at examining the influence of blood group O on P. falciparum infection among pregnant women in hyper- to holo-endemic Ghana using PCR for blood group genotyping

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