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Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification

Vector-borne diseases account for more than 17% of all infectious diseases, causing more than one million deaths annually. Malaria remains one of the most important public health problems worldwide. These vectors are bloodsucking insects, which can transmit disease-producing microorganisms during a...

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Autores principales: Nascimento, Joabi, Sampaio, Vanderson S., Karl, Stephan, Kuehn, Andrea, Almeida, Anne, Vitor-Silva, Sheila, de Melo, Gisely Cardoso, Baia da Silva, Djane C., C. P. Lopes, Stefanie, Fé, Nelson F., Lima, José B. Pereira, Guerra, Maria G. Barbosa, Pimenta, Paulo F. P., Bassat, Quique, Mueller, Ivo, Lacerda, Marcus V. G., Monteiro, Wuelton M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6258424/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30418971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006909
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author Nascimento, Joabi
Sampaio, Vanderson S.
Karl, Stephan
Kuehn, Andrea
Almeida, Anne
Vitor-Silva, Sheila
de Melo, Gisely Cardoso
Baia da Silva, Djane C.
C. P. Lopes, Stefanie
Fé, Nelson F.
Lima, José B. Pereira
Guerra, Maria G. Barbosa
Pimenta, Paulo F. P.
Bassat, Quique
Mueller, Ivo
Lacerda, Marcus V. G.
Monteiro, Wuelton M.
author_facet Nascimento, Joabi
Sampaio, Vanderson S.
Karl, Stephan
Kuehn, Andrea
Almeida, Anne
Vitor-Silva, Sheila
de Melo, Gisely Cardoso
Baia da Silva, Djane C.
C. P. Lopes, Stefanie
Fé, Nelson F.
Lima, José B. Pereira
Guerra, Maria G. Barbosa
Pimenta, Paulo F. P.
Bassat, Quique
Mueller, Ivo
Lacerda, Marcus V. G.
Monteiro, Wuelton M.
author_sort Nascimento, Joabi
collection PubMed
description Vector-borne diseases account for more than 17% of all infectious diseases, causing more than one million deaths annually. Malaria remains one of the most important public health problems worldwide. These vectors are bloodsucking insects, which can transmit disease-producing microorganisms during a blood meal. The contact of culicids with human populations living in malaria-endemic areas suggests that the identification of Plasmodium genetic material in the blood present in the gut of these mosquitoes may be possible. The process of assessing the blood meal for the presence of pathogens is termed ‘xenosurveillance’. In view of this, the present work investigated the relationship between the frequency with which Plasmodium DNA is found in culicids and the frequency with which individuals are found to be carrying malaria parasites. A cross-sectional study was performed in a peri-urban area of Manaus, in the Western Brazilian Amazon, by simultaneously collecting human blood samples and trapping culicids from households. A total of 875 individuals were included in the study and a total of 13,374mosquito specimens were captured. Malaria prevalence in the study area was 7.7%. The frequency of households with at least one culicid specimen carrying Plasmodium DNA was 6.4%. Plasmodium infection incidence was significantly related to whether any Plasmodium positive blood-fed culicid was found in the same household [IRR 3.49 (CI95% 1.38–8.84); p = 0.008] and for indoor-collected culicids [IRR 4.07 (CI95%1.25–13.24); p = 0.020]. Furthermore, the number of infected people in the house at the time of mosquito collection was related to whether there were any positive blood-fed culicid mosquitoes in that household for collection methods combined [IRR 4.48 (CI95%2.22–9.05); p<0.001] or only for indoor-collected culicids [IRR 4.88 (CI95%2.01–11.82); p<0.001]. Our results suggest that xenosurveillance can be used in endemic tropical regions in order to estimate the malaria burden and identify transmission foci in areas where Plasmodium vivax is predominant.
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spelling pubmed-62584242018-12-06 Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification Nascimento, Joabi Sampaio, Vanderson S. Karl, Stephan Kuehn, Andrea Almeida, Anne Vitor-Silva, Sheila de Melo, Gisely Cardoso Baia da Silva, Djane C. C. P. Lopes, Stefanie Fé, Nelson F. Lima, José B. Pereira Guerra, Maria G. Barbosa Pimenta, Paulo F. P. Bassat, Quique Mueller, Ivo Lacerda, Marcus V. G. Monteiro, Wuelton M. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Vector-borne diseases account for more than 17% of all infectious diseases, causing more than one million deaths annually. Malaria remains one of the most important public health problems worldwide. These vectors are bloodsucking insects, which can transmit disease-producing microorganisms during a blood meal. The contact of culicids with human populations living in malaria-endemic areas suggests that the identification of Plasmodium genetic material in the blood present in the gut of these mosquitoes may be possible. The process of assessing the blood meal for the presence of pathogens is termed ‘xenosurveillance’. In view of this, the present work investigated the relationship between the frequency with which Plasmodium DNA is found in culicids and the frequency with which individuals are found to be carrying malaria parasites. A cross-sectional study was performed in a peri-urban area of Manaus, in the Western Brazilian Amazon, by simultaneously collecting human blood samples and trapping culicids from households. A total of 875 individuals were included in the study and a total of 13,374mosquito specimens were captured. Malaria prevalence in the study area was 7.7%. The frequency of households with at least one culicid specimen carrying Plasmodium DNA was 6.4%. Plasmodium infection incidence was significantly related to whether any Plasmodium positive blood-fed culicid was found in the same household [IRR 3.49 (CI95% 1.38–8.84); p = 0.008] and for indoor-collected culicids [IRR 4.07 (CI95%1.25–13.24); p = 0.020]. Furthermore, the number of infected people in the house at the time of mosquito collection was related to whether there were any positive blood-fed culicid mosquitoes in that household for collection methods combined [IRR 4.48 (CI95%2.22–9.05); p<0.001] or only for indoor-collected culicids [IRR 4.88 (CI95%2.01–11.82); p<0.001]. Our results suggest that xenosurveillance can be used in endemic tropical regions in order to estimate the malaria burden and identify transmission foci in areas where Plasmodium vivax is predominant. Public Library of Science 2018-11-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6258424/ /pubmed/30418971 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006909 Text en © 2018 Nascimento et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nascimento, Joabi
Sampaio, Vanderson S.
Karl, Stephan
Kuehn, Andrea
Almeida, Anne
Vitor-Silva, Sheila
de Melo, Gisely Cardoso
Baia da Silva, Djane C.
C. P. Lopes, Stefanie
Fé, Nelson F.
Lima, José B. Pereira
Guerra, Maria G. Barbosa
Pimenta, Paulo F. P.
Bassat, Quique
Mueller, Ivo
Lacerda, Marcus V. G.
Monteiro, Wuelton M.
Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification
title Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification
title_full Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification
title_fullStr Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification
title_full_unstemmed Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification
title_short Use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for Plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification
title_sort use of anthropophilic culicid-based xenosurveillance as a proxy for plasmodium vivax malaria burden and transmission hotspots identification
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6258424/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30418971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006909
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