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Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands

BACKGROUND: The East African highlands are fringe regions between stable and unstable malaria transmission. What factors contribute to the heterogeneity of malaria exposure on different spatial scales within larger foci has not been extensively studied. In a comprehensive, community-based cross-sect...

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Autores principales: Baidjoe, Amrish Y., Stevenson, Jennifer, Knight, Philip, Stone, William, Stresman, Gillian, Osoti, Victor, Makori, Euniah, Owaga, Chrispin, Odongo, Wycliffe, China, Pauline, Shagari, Shehu, Kariuki, Simon, Drakeley, Chris, Cox, Jonathan, Bousema, Teun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4893231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27259286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-016-1362-y
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author Baidjoe, Amrish Y.
Stevenson, Jennifer
Knight, Philip
Stone, William
Stresman, Gillian
Osoti, Victor
Makori, Euniah
Owaga, Chrispin
Odongo, Wycliffe
China, Pauline
Shagari, Shehu
Kariuki, Simon
Drakeley, Chris
Cox, Jonathan
Bousema, Teun
author_facet Baidjoe, Amrish Y.
Stevenson, Jennifer
Knight, Philip
Stone, William
Stresman, Gillian
Osoti, Victor
Makori, Euniah
Owaga, Chrispin
Odongo, Wycliffe
China, Pauline
Shagari, Shehu
Kariuki, Simon
Drakeley, Chris
Cox, Jonathan
Bousema, Teun
author_sort Baidjoe, Amrish Y.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The East African highlands are fringe regions between stable and unstable malaria transmission. What factors contribute to the heterogeneity of malaria exposure on different spatial scales within larger foci has not been extensively studied. In a comprehensive, community-based cross-sectional survey an attempt was made to identify factors that drive the macro- and micro epidemiology of malaria in a fringe region using parasitological and serological outcomes. METHODS: A large cross-sectional survey including 17,503 individuals was conducted across all age groups in a 100 km(2) area in the Western Kenyan highlands of Rachuonyo South district. Households were geo-located and prevalence of malaria parasites and malaria-specific antibodies were determined by PCR and ELISA. Household and individual risk-factors were recorded. Geographical characteristics of the study area were digitally derived using high-resolution satellite images. RESULTS: Malaria antibody prevalence strongly related to altitude (1350–1600 m, p < 0.001). A strong negative association with increasing altitude and PCR parasite prevalence was found. Parasite carriage was detected at all altitudes and in all age groups; 93.2 % (2481/2663) of malaria infections were apparently asymptomatic. Malaria parasite prevalence was associated with age, bed net use, house construction features, altitude and topographical wetness index. Antibody prevalence was associated with all these factors and distance to the nearest water body. CONCLUSION: Altitude was a major driver of malaria transmission in this study area, even across narrow altitude bands. The large proportion of asymptomatic parasite carriers at all altitudes and the age-dependent acquisition of malaria antibodies indicate stable malaria transmission; the strong correlation between current parasite carriage and serological markers of malaria exposure indicate temporal stability of spatially heterogeneous transmission.
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spelling pubmed-48932312016-06-05 Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands Baidjoe, Amrish Y. Stevenson, Jennifer Knight, Philip Stone, William Stresman, Gillian Osoti, Victor Makori, Euniah Owaga, Chrispin Odongo, Wycliffe China, Pauline Shagari, Shehu Kariuki, Simon Drakeley, Chris Cox, Jonathan Bousema, Teun Malar J Research BACKGROUND: The East African highlands are fringe regions between stable and unstable malaria transmission. What factors contribute to the heterogeneity of malaria exposure on different spatial scales within larger foci has not been extensively studied. In a comprehensive, community-based cross-sectional survey an attempt was made to identify factors that drive the macro- and micro epidemiology of malaria in a fringe region using parasitological and serological outcomes. METHODS: A large cross-sectional survey including 17,503 individuals was conducted across all age groups in a 100 km(2) area in the Western Kenyan highlands of Rachuonyo South district. Households were geo-located and prevalence of malaria parasites and malaria-specific antibodies were determined by PCR and ELISA. Household and individual risk-factors were recorded. Geographical characteristics of the study area were digitally derived using high-resolution satellite images. RESULTS: Malaria antibody prevalence strongly related to altitude (1350–1600 m, p < 0.001). A strong negative association with increasing altitude and PCR parasite prevalence was found. Parasite carriage was detected at all altitudes and in all age groups; 93.2 % (2481/2663) of malaria infections were apparently asymptomatic. Malaria parasite prevalence was associated with age, bed net use, house construction features, altitude and topographical wetness index. Antibody prevalence was associated with all these factors and distance to the nearest water body. CONCLUSION: Altitude was a major driver of malaria transmission in this study area, even across narrow altitude bands. The large proportion of asymptomatic parasite carriers at all altitudes and the age-dependent acquisition of malaria antibodies indicate stable malaria transmission; the strong correlation between current parasite carriage and serological markers of malaria exposure indicate temporal stability of spatially heterogeneous transmission. BioMed Central 2016-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4893231/ /pubmed/27259286 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-016-1362-y Text en © The Author(s) 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Baidjoe, Amrish Y.
Stevenson, Jennifer
Knight, Philip
Stone, William
Stresman, Gillian
Osoti, Victor
Makori, Euniah
Owaga, Chrispin
Odongo, Wycliffe
China, Pauline
Shagari, Shehu
Kariuki, Simon
Drakeley, Chris
Cox, Jonathan
Bousema, Teun
Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands
title Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands
title_full Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands
title_fullStr Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands
title_full_unstemmed Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands
title_short Factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the Western Kenyan highlands
title_sort factors associated with high heterogeneity of malaria at fine spatial scale in the western kenyan highlands
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4893231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27259286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12936-016-1362-y
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